Abstracts
Silicon is considered an important chemical element for rice, because it can improve tolerance to biotic and abiotic stress. However, in many situations no positive effect of silicon was observed, probably due to genetic factors. The objective of this research was to monitor Si uptake kinetics and identify responses of rice cultivars in terms of Si uptake capacity and use. The experiment was carried out in a greenhouse of the São Paulo State University (UNESP), Brazil. The experiment was arranged in a completely randomized, factorial design with three replications. that consisted of two rice cultivars and two Si levels. Kinetic parameters (Vmax, Km, and Cmin), root morphology variables, dry matter yield, Si accumulation and levels in shoots and roots, uptake efficiency, utilization efficiency, and root/shoot ratio were evaluated. Higher Si concentrations in the nutrient solution did not increase rice dry matter. The development of the low-affinity silicon uptake system of the rice cultivar 'Caiapó' was better than of 'Maravilha'.
Oryza sativa L.; uptake efficiency; utilization efficiency
O silício é considerado um elemento químico importante para o arroz, pois tem proporcionado tolerância a estresses bióticos e abióticos. No entanto, em muitas situações, não tem sido constatado efeito positivo desse mineral, o que pode estar relacionado a fatores genéticos. Este trabalho teve por objetivo encontrar respostas entre cultivares de arroz quanto à capacidade de absorção e utilização do Si. O experimento foi desenvolvido em casa de vegetação, na Faculdade de Ciências Agronômicas/Unesp. O delineamento experimental foi inteiramente casualizado, composto por dois cultivares e dois níveis de Si, com seis repetições. Foram avaliados os parâmetros cinéticos (Vmax, Km e Cmin), as características morfológicas de raízes, a massa de matéria seca, o teor e quantidade de Si acumulada, a eficiência de absorção e utilização e a relação raiz/parte aérea. A maior concentração de Si na solução nutritiva não promoveu aumento da massa de matéria seca do arroz. O cultivar Caiapó mostrou maior desenvolvimento do sistema de absorção de Si de baixa afinidade, em relação ao Maravilha.
Oryza sativa L.; eficiência de absorção; eficiência de utilização
DIVISÃO 3 - USO E MANEJO DO SOLO
COMISSÃO 3.1 - FERTILIDADE DO SOLO E NUTRIÇÃO DE PLANTAS
Kinetic parameters of silicon uptake by rice cultivars(1 (1 ) This research was supported by FAPESP (São Paulo Research Foundation). )
Parâmetros cinéticos da absorção de silício por cultivares de arroz
Priscila Oliveira Martins; Carlos Alexandre Costa Crusciol; Cristiane Pilon
Department of Crop Science, College of Agricultural Sciences, UNESP. José Barbosa de Barros 1780, CEP 18610-307 Botucatu (SP), Brazil. E-mails: po.martins@hotmail.com; crusciol@fca.unesp.br; cristianepilon@yahoo.com.br
ABSTRACT
Silicon is considered an important chemical element for rice, because it can improve tolerance to biotic and abiotic stress. However, in many situations no positive effect of silicon was observed, probably due to genetic factors. The objective of this research was to monitor Si uptake kinetics and identify responses of rice cultivars in terms of Si uptake capacity and use. The experiment was carried out in a greenhouse of the São Paulo State University (UNESP), Brazil. The experiment was arranged in a completely randomized, factorial design with three replications. that consisted of two rice cultivars and two Si levels. Kinetic parameters (Vmax, Km, and Cmin), root morphology variables, dry matter yield, Si accumulation and levels in shoots and roots, uptake efficiency, utilization efficiency, and root/shoot ratio were evaluated. Higher Si concentrations in the nutrient solution did not increase rice dry matter. The development of the low-affinity silicon uptake system of the rice cultivar 'Caiapó' was better than of 'Maravilha'.
Index terms:Oryza sativa L., uptake efficiency, utilization efficiency.
RESUMO
O silício é considerado um elemento químico importante para o arroz, pois tem proporcionado tolerância a estresses bióticos e abióticos. No entanto, em muitas situações, não tem sido constatado efeito positivo desse mineral, o que pode estar relacionado a fatores genéticos. Este trabalho teve por objetivo encontrar respostas entre cultivares de arroz quanto à capacidade de absorção e utilização do Si. O experimento foi desenvolvido em casa de vegetação, na Faculdade de Ciências Agronômicas/Unesp. O delineamento experimental foi inteiramente casualizado, composto por dois cultivares e dois níveis de Si, com seis repetições. Foram avaliados os parâmetros cinéticos (Vmax, Km e Cmin), as características morfológicas de raízes, a massa de matéria seca, o teor e quantidade de Si acumulada, a eficiência de absorção e utilização e a relação raiz/parte aérea. A maior concentração de Si na solução nutritiva não promoveu aumento da massa de matéria seca do arroz. O cultivar Caiapó mostrou maior desenvolvimento do sistema de absorção de Si de baixa afinidade, em relação ao Maravilha.
Termos de indexação:Oryza sativa L., eficiência de absorção, eficiência de utilização.
INTRODUCTION
Beneficial effects of Si application have been observed for a number of crops, especially under biotic and abiotic stress, although its essentiality for plants has not been proved (Epstein & Bloom, 2006). In rice it is one of the mineral elements extracted from the soil at highest quantities (Savant et al., 1997).
For rice, Si is considered a highly important mineral element because it can increase the number and size of aerenchyma - structures that conduct oxygen from the aerial part of the plant into the roots - increasing the oxidation power of Fe and Mn and decreasing their toxicity in the plant (Vermas & Minhas, 1989; Liang et al., 2007). According to Yoshida et al. (1962), Si is present in combined silica and cellulose compounds below the cuticle. This reduces transpiration and increases the mechanical resistance of the leaves against fungal infection and insect attacks.
In many studies (Faria Junior et al.,2009; Mauad et al., 2011), no positive effect of Si was verified, even when applied to Si-poor soils and to crops under some type of stress; maybe because the Si leaf contents were not very different from stress-free plants fertilized with the element (Mauad et al., 2011). This discrepancy in results could be related to genetic factors, i.e., differences between cultivars with regard to their uptake capacity at low Si availability and/or to utilize the absorbed element with higher efficiency.
A mineral can be transported through the roots by two mechanisms, active and passive, which occur with and against an electrochemical potential gradient, respectively (Epstein & Bloom, 2006). Active transportation is mediated by carriers located on the cytoplasmic cell membrane at the root-soil interface (Clarkson & Hawkesford, 1993). According to Ma & Takahashi (2002), Si uptake by rice is an active process, based on specific membrane proteins for this purpose, i.e., Si uptake may occur even against a concentration gradient.
Epstein & Hagen (1952) utilized carrier studies to quantify ion uptake kinetics and demonstrated their similarity with the enzymatic kinetics of Michaelis & Menten (1913). Thus, the transport velocity of an ion through a membrane would be associated with the following factors: Vmax (maximum uptake velocity when all binding sites are saturated), Km (Michaelis-Menten constant, equivalent to the ion concentration at 50 % of Vmax), and Cmin (concentration at which net uptake of ions ceases before the solution is completely depleted of ions).
Epstein et al. (1963) and Elzam et al. (1964) conducted experiments with K+, Rb+, and Cl-, and found two uptake mechanisms working in a wide concentration range (0.002-50mmolL-1) of these elements. At low Rb+ concentrations, the uptake rate followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, reaching a plateau at approximately 0.2mmolL-1 Rb+ (mechanism 1). At higher concentration ranges (up to 50mmolL-1), the Rb+ uptake rate significantly exceeded the maximum rate asymptotically approached by the mechanism in operation at low rates, with the appearance of a second isotherm. In fact, this second isotherm is a sum of several isotherms that appear at high concentration ranges (mechanism 2).
The range for mechanism 1 is also called HATS - High Affinity Transport System. The range for mechanism 2 represents the so-called LATS - Low Affinity Transport System. The limits between the high- (HATS) and low-affinity (LATS) systems have already been defined for NH4+, with a limit concentration between the two systems of 1mmolL-1 (Wang et al., 1993; Kronzucker et al., 1996).
According to Epstein & Bloom (2006), the same type of mechanism applies to the transport of neutral solutes, such as sugars and silicic acid. However, Si uptake experiments at concentrations higher than 2.0mmolL-1 Si are unfeasible, because contrary to most minerals, Si (silicic acid) starts to polymerize at concentrations > 2.0mmolL-1 at 25 ºC.
In addition to the Si concentration, bioavailability dynamics also play a role, i.e., by means of a plant´s own genetic traits, it naturally interferes with nutrient availability in the soil. Therefore, the uptake mechanisms at the soil-root interface are influenced by physiological efficiency and by the plant root morphology, i.e., root length, surface, and mean diameter (Barber, 1984).
Consequently, the hypothesis to explain the discrepancy in rice response to Si supply is associated with differences in the Si uptake capacity of cultivars at high and low availability.
The objective of this study was to identify any differences between two rice cultivars with regard to their Si uptake and utilization efficiency by means of uptake kinetic parameters in environments with high and low availability of this mineral.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
The experiment was carried out in a greenhouse of the College of Agricultural Science, UNESP, Botucatu, São Paulo State, Brazil, in a completely randomized design, consisting of two rice cultivars with different Si accumulation (1- high accumulation: Caiapó; and 2- low accumulation: Maravilha) and two Si doses in solution (high: 1.7 mmol L-1; and low: 0.1 mmol L-1), with six replicates.
The rice seeds were placed to germinate on filter paper. The paper was rolled up, moistened, and placed in a germinator at a mean temperature of 25 ºC and 8 h light. At radicle emergence, the paper rolls were placed vertically in plastic containers with a nutrient solution layer of approximately 10 cm (Furlani & Furlani, 1988, modified), at 1/4 ionic strength. The containers were maintained in a greenhouse at room temperature (22-27 ºC).
Emergence occurred after 8 days; 2 days later, the plantlets were previously selected for health and uniformity and transferred to 4.2 L plastic pots (11.0 × 13.5 × 28.0 cm), fixed on styrofoam plates. Each pot received 6 rice plantlets; the pots were equipped so that the 4.0 L nutrient solution was sparged with an oil-free air compressor for 12 h a day, with low air injection, from 6:30 am to 6:30 pm. A modified nutrient solution of Furlani & Furlani (1988) was used, containing (mg L-1): Ca = 151, K = 141, Mg = 17, P = 6, N-NO3 = 138, N-NH4 = 20, S = 56, Cl = 33, Fe = 3.6, Mn = 0.5, B = 0.27, Zn = 0.15, Cu = 0.04, Mo = 0.08, as Ca(NO3)2.4H2O, KCl, MgSO4.7H2O, KH2PO4, NH4NO3, K2SO4, KNO3, Fe-EDTA prepared with NaEDTA and FeSO4.7H2O, MnCl2.4H2O, H3BO3, ZnSO4.7H2O, CuSO4.5H2O, and Na2MoO4.2H2O. Silicic acid was used as Si source, prepared by passing potassium silicate (brand name FertiSil), diluted to 10 % in deionized water, through cation exchange resin.
Initially, the ion strength of the nutrient solution was 1/10. After 7 days the solution was replaced with a solution of 1/2 ion strength; in the third week, a complete nutrient solution containing Si doses was applied. The solution pH was measured daily and maintained at around 5.5 (corrections with 0.1molL-1 HCl or NaOH solutions).
The plantlets were assessed 25 and 40 days after transplanting. The kinetic uptake parameters were determined when Si concentration in the nutrient solution started to decrease, according to the method described by Claassen & Barber (1974). To that effect, the solutions were replaced, and Si was omitted for 24 h. Next, another nutrient solution containing 1.7 or 0.1 mmol L-1 Si was added to a 1.5 L volume after 25 days and to 3.0 L after 40 days, so as to maintain the entire root system submerged in solution to allow complete Si uptake time in less time, since the volume doubled in the last evaluation (40 days).
After 30 min - sufficient time to allow the rice plants to reach a steady state (Epstein & Hagen, 1952) - 10 mL samples were collected from the nutrient solution every 15 min in the first two hours; every 30 min in the following 4 h; every 60 min in the subsequent 6 h; at the end of 24 h; and then every 12 hours until the Si concentration remained constant. The volume in the pots was maintained constant, and the removed solution was replaced with deionized water, according to the methodology proposed by Claassen & Barber (1974). The Si content in the samples was determined by the method described by Elliott & Snyder (1991), adapted by Korndörfer et al. (1999). The kinetic parameters were calculated using the Cinética software (Ruiz & Fernandes Filho, 1992), and Si uptake velocity curves were fitted using the Sigma Plot 10.0 program. Cmin (concentration in µmol L-1, at which Si net flow is null) was estimated by the average Si concentrations in the exhaust solution, from the point at which they tended to remain constant, i.e., when no statistical difference was observed between the points.
At the end of the solution sampling period, the plants were harvested and separated in aerial part (shoots) and roots. One root sample was taken from each experimental unit; samples were extracted along the entire root length, from the root collar down to the tip of the root system. Samples were stored in 100 mL plastic pots with 70 % alcohol solution in an air-conditioned room for subsequent morphological analysis.
The variables root length, surface, and mean diameter were evaluated using a specifically developed scanner together with software WinRhizo, based on the method of Tennant as operating principle (1975).
The aerial part of the plants and their root systems, together with the samples used for the morphological determinations were washed in running water and dried to constant weight in a forced air circulation oven at 65 ºC. The material was then weighed and ground in a Willey-type mill, and Si contents in the plant tissues determined, according to the technique described by Elliott & Snyder (1991), adapted by Korndörfer et al. (1999). Si accumulation was determined as the product of the content multiplied by dry matter values.
Uptake efficiency was estimated by the ratio: (UE) = (total Si accumulation in the plant expressed in mg)/(root dry matter yield in g), according to Swiader et al. (1994); Si utilization efficiency was calculated as follows: (UTLE) = (total dry matter yield in g)2/(total Si accumulation in the plant expressed in mg), according to Siddiqi & Glass (1981). The root/aerial part ratio was determined by dividing root dry matter by aerial dry matter yield.
The data were subjected to analysis of variance and the means compared by the LSD test at 5 % significance, using SISVAR software (Ferreira 2000).
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Based on the analysis of variance (Table 1) a significant effect was verified for the factors and the interaction for all variables. However, based on the mean comparison analysis (Table 2), it was observed that Si rates did not influence dry matter yield of the aerial part (DMAEP), roots (DMRT), and total dry matter yield (TDMY). Korndörfer et al. (2010), Faria Junior et al. (2009), and Mauad et al. (2003) found no significant effects of Si fertilization either on dry matter yield in pasture and rice. This is due to the fact that Si is related to a structural function, not to growth processes such as cell elongation and multiplication. Rice is a Si-accumulating plant; Si is accumulated in the cell walls of the leaf cuticle in the form of amorphous silica (SiO2.nH2O), thus contributing to improve the plant architecture (Ma et al., 2001).
In addition, Si can interfer with productivity and influences yield stability, i.e., when the plant is exposed to some sort of stress, increased Si doses may reduce impacts on yield, resulting in significant differences in relation to plants that did not receive Si.
Of the cultivars, the DMAEP of Caiapó was higher than of Maravilha, after 25 as well as 40 days. An inversion of this tendency only occurred for DMRT after 40 days, at the dose of 1.7 mmol L-1 Si (Table 2). After 25 days, the TDMY variable reflected the results obtained for DMAEP and DMRT, i.e., a higher TDMY was observed for Caiapó (Table 2).
After 40 days, the root length and surface of Maravilha were smaller (Table 2) at the dose of 1.7 mmol L-1 than at 0.1 mmol L-1 Si, equivalent to a 35 % decrease in root length and 26 % in root surface. Between cultivars, greater length (29 %) and root surface (27 %) were observed for Maravilha than Caiapó at the dose of 0.1 mmol L-1 Si.
After 25 days, the root diameter in cultivar Caiapó increased significantly with the application of the higher Si dose. In the comparison of cultivars, at the higher Si dose, the root diameter of Caiapó was greater than of Maravilha; after 40 days, however, an inversion occurred in the behavior of this variable, and Maravilha had a greater diameter (Table 2). Similar results - increased root diameter as nutrient doses increased - were also observed by Corrêa et al. (2006) and Pavinato et al. (2009), by the application of boron to rice crops.
Smaller root diameters may increase the uptake and translocation velocity of a mineral, because the thinner the root, the shorter the way from the plasmalemma to the xylem and phloem vessels. This behavior can be observed in table 3, where the uptake velocity value of Caiapó was higher than of Maravilha after 40 days. The differential behavior between rice cultivars for root diameter may also be attributed to the specific genetic traits of each cultivar.
The Si depletion curves in the nutrient solution show the differences in Si uptake between cultivars at both Si doses and both evaluation times (Figure 1). Therefore, it can be inferred that Maravilha absorbed Si from the solution more slowly than Caiapó, once again demonstrating differences between cultivars in the mineral uptake process.
The values of Si uptake kinetic parameters varied with Si concentration in the solution (Table 3). Km values, which represent the affinity of the transport system with the ion to be transported, were lower at the 0.1 mmol L-1 Si dose, allowing the inference that at this dose a high-affinity transport system was predominant, while at 1.7 mmol L-1 Si a low-affinity system was predominant, graphically represented by two isotherms (Figure 2). Similar results were found by Borges et al. (2009) in a study that evaluated ammonium uptake kinetics at low and high doses (1.43 and 8.57 mmol L-1 N, respectively) in corn varieties.
According to Malavolta (2006), when the range of external concentrations is sufficiently broad, two and sometimes more isotherms may occur, instead of a single one. The so-called double pattern is interpreted as a result of the operation of two carriers: in the smaller concentration range, a carrier would operate for the element with which it has higher affinity, while in the higher concentration range, a carrier would operate for the ion with which it has lower affinity.
According to Wang et al. (1993), the Km values of high- and low-affinity transport systems differ. Since Km represents the substrate concentration at which the transport process reaches half of the maximum velocity, the affinity for the substrate is the most relevant parameter in describing ion transport systems involving plant nutrient uptake (Wirén et al., 2000).
After 25 days, no significant differences were observed for Vmax (maximum uptake velocity), which reflects the uptake capacity of a given ion, or Km between cultivars (Table 3). However, after 40 days at the dose of 1.7 mmol L-1 Si, the Vmax (98.0 µmol g-1 h-1) of cultivar Caiapó was higher and Km (269.7 µmol L-1) lower than of Maravilha. These Vmax values differ from those reported by Tamai & Ma (2003), (Vmax = 221 µmol g-1 h-1), whereas the Km values were similar (Km = 320 µmol L-1). Possibly, this difference in Vmax values was due to a difference in uptake efficiency between cultivars, or due to different growing conditions in the experiments, although similar.
The observed Km values - ranging from 18.5 to 481.5 mmol L-1 for Si - were much higher than for other minerals. For example, P Km is between 1 and 5 µmol L-1 (Kochian, 2000). This result indicates that the Si carrier in rice roots has low affinity for Si. A possible explanation for this low affinity is that, contrary to other minerals, Si is abundant in the soil solution and a high-affinity carrier is unnecessary (Tamai & Ma, 2003). Another explanation would be the fact that Si is not an essential element for plants.
The Km value for the solution containing 0.1 mmol L-1 Si, regardless of the cultivar (Table 3), was 11 times smaller than the high-Si-dose solution, although the ratio between Si concentrations in the solutions was 17. This demonstrates that carriers activated in the low concentration range have much more affinity with the nutrient than those in the high concentration range (Matias et al., 2003).
In general, parameters Vmax and Km decreased with plant age. Sacramento & Rosolem (1997) also verified a reduction in the kinetic parameters Vmax and Cmin for K uptake by soybean plants, as a function of plant age.
For kinetic parameter Cmin - a threshold concentration below which the plant is unable to uptake the ion and, therefore, any increase in Cmin values means a reduction in the nutrient uptake efficiency - it can be said that the results demonstrate that Cmin is also subject to modulation. Values for this variable were different between Si doses for Caiapó after 25 days, and for Maravilha after 40 days (Table 3), with the highest values found for the lower Si dose. At the 0.1 mmol L-1 Si dose (Table 3), Caiapó had a higher Cmin value after 25 days and Maravilha had a higher Cmin value after 40 days.
It was noted that the application of the higher Si dose significantly increased Si contents in the aerial part and roots in both cultivars (Table 3), demonstrating the action of a low-affinity Si transport system. The low-affinity transport system is responsible for transporting nutrients found at high external concentrations, showing a linear increase in activity as a response to concentration, according to Wang et al., (1993) and Kronzucker et al., (1996) in a study on ammonium uptake kinetics. This system is responsible for maintaining great uptake in situations of high external availability of the nutrient (Borges et al., 2009).
Examples of increased Si contents in plant tissues due to Si fertilization are frequently reported in the literature, especially in the tropics, since in the case of Brazil, soils are Si-poor, due to their high degree of weathering (Barbosa Filho et al., 2001).
Among cultivars, only at the dose of 0.1 mmol L-1 Si after 25 days, no significant difference was observed for Si content in the aerial part. In the other treatments, the Si content was highest for the cultivar Maravilha, which belongs to the modern group (Table 3). Modern cultivars are more productive, smaller, have erect leaves (higher photosynthetic efficiency), and high tillering capacity (Breseghello et al., 1998). These traits allow a higher nutrient uptake.
It is worth noting that rice genotypes are quite different in their Si uptake capacity (Tamai & Ma, 2003) and that these differences in the uptake process are associated with genetic traits that control inheritance for nutrient use efficiency. Environmental differences also play a role in the modulation of uptake kinetic parameters.
Silicon content in the root (Table 3) was not different in most treatments. Perhaps this is due to the fact that Si deposition occurs especially in the aerial part of the plant, as observed by several authors (Yoshida et al., 1962; Agarie et al., 1998). Only at the highest Si dose, after 25 days, the root Si content of Maravilha was higher than of Caiapó.
Silicon accumulation in the aerial part (Table 4) was higher at the dose of 1.7 mmol L-1 than at 0.1 mmol L-1, in both samplings. No differences were observed between cultivars. The same is valid for Si accumulation in the entire plant (Table 4). However, Faria Junior et al. (2009) and Mauad et al. (2011) observed differences between rice genotypes for Si accumulation.
Maybe the difference in Si accumulation between cultivars was limited by the maximum Si dose which, even though considered high, was low in relation to the Si uptake capacity of this plant. However, the use of higher doses than in this study from the source used here would be difficult, since values of > 2.0 mmol L-1 Si in the nutrient solution would lead to Si precipitation.
The uptake efficiency of the plants grown at the lower Si dose was lower. It can be said that the uptake was probably not reduced because the uptake system was inefficient, but due to the low Si availability (Table 4).
In terms of uptake efficiency, after 25 days at the higher Si dose and after 40 days at the lower Si dose cultivar Maravilha showed higher UE. This may be due to the smaller root diameter and greater root system (Table 2) of this cultivar in the respective evaluations, which resulted in an advantageous Si uptake (Table 4). On the other hand, at the higher Si dose after 40 days, the UE of Caiapó had a higher UE. This was possibly related to kinetic and morphological root factors that are directly related to uptake mechanisms occurring at the soil-root interface, since this cultivar had the highest average Vmax (Table 3) and smallest root diameter values (Table 2), resulting in greater UE.
The result found for utilization efficiency (UTLE) was opposite to the result found for the UE. A difference between Si doses was also observed; however, the highest UTLE value was found at the dose of 0.1 mmol L-1 Si, demonstrating that Si is not associated with plant growth processes. Differences between cultivars only occurred at the lower Si dose after 40 days, with Caiapó providing the highest UTLE value (Table 4).
After 25 days, no difference was found for the root/aerial part ratio (RT/AEP). However, after 40 days the highest values were found for cultivar Maravilha, both at the higher and the lower Si doses (Table 4). An influence of Si doses was only observed for Caiapó, for which the RT/AEP ratio was higher at the lower Si dose.
A high root/aerial part ratio can be beneficial when soil fertility is low, because a greater root area is available to meet the plant needs. On the other hand, greater translocation of photoassimilates into the root system may limit the growth of the aerial part, decreasing the photosynthetically active area and reducing crop productivity when the stress condition persists for a long time. This physiological adjustment of the plant has a metabolic cost that can be irreversible, depending on the plant developmental stage.
The RT/AEP ratio was inversely proportional to the total plant dry matter yield. After 40 days, the cultivars showed higher TDMY (Table 2) and lower RT/AEP ratio (Table 4) than the 25-day assessment; this decrease in RT/AEP ratio values was probably due to a greater growth of the aerial part in detriment of the roots, i.e., at that tmie, most photoassimilates were being transported to the developing aerial part (growth and development of tillers and leaves).
CONCLUSIONS
1. The low-affinity Si uptake system is more developed in cultivar Caiapó than in Maravilha; Si uptake of Caiapó is more efficient at high availability of the mineral.
2. Higher Si concentrations in the nutrient solution do not increase rice dry matter yield.
3. In older plants, the maximum uptake rates (Vmax) and Km values are lower than in younger plants.
4. When developing under low Si availability, the cultivars Caiapó and Maravilha depend on higher Cmin values to be able to absorb this mineral.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors are indebted to the State of São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) for financial support and a graduate scholarship of the first author, and to the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) for an award for excellence in research of the second author.
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Received for publication in March 24, 2011 and approved in November 11, 2011.
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
16 Apr 2012 -
Date of issue
Feb 2012
History
-
Received
24 Apr 2011 -
Accepted
11 Nov 2011