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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2020, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (6): 1875-1881.doi: 10.13287/j.1001-9332.202006.029

• Special Features of Stable Isotope Ecology • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Nitrogen uptake, distribution, and utilization in young bearing Huangguan pear trees under 15N-urea application in spring

SUN Ming-de, WU Yang, LIANG Zhen-xu, TIAN Hai-qing, ZHAO Yan-yan, DU Rui-rui, LIU Jun, LIU Song-zhong*   

  1. Beijing Academy of Forestry and Pomology Sciences, Beijing Engineering Research Center for Deciduous Fruit Trees, Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Biology and Genetic Improvement of Horticultural Crops in North China, Beijing 100093, China
  • Received:2019-12-30 Online:2020-06-15 Published:2020-06-15
  • Contact: * E-mail: szliu1978@163.com
  • Supported by:
    This work was supported by the National Science and Technology Support Plan (2014BAD16B03), the National Key Research and Development Program (2019YFD1000102) and the Science and Technology Innovation Capacity Building Program of Beijing Academy of Agriculture and Forestry (KJCX20170111, KJCX20180701).

Abstract: We investigated the characteristics of nitrogen uptake, distribution, and utilization in the three-year-old bearing Huangguan pear trees following 15N-urea application in early spring. The results showed that the growth of pear trees was mainly depended on vegetative organs such as shoots and leaves at the stage from budbreak to shoot growth arrest, but mainly on storage organs (roots) and supplemented by the formation of fruit yield and quality at the stage from shoot growth arrest stage to fruit harvest. Meanwhile, tree biomass, especially that storage organs, substantially increased. All organs, especially newly developed shoots and leaves, acquired more N in shoot growth arrest stage due to vigorous growth, with relatively higher N derived from fertilizer (Ndff). Ndff of each organ except for root was lower at fruit maturity stage than that at shoot growth stage. Most of the labeled nitrogen was distributed in the newly developed organs (shoots and leaves) from budbreak to shoot growth arrest stage, but in the storage organs during shoot growth arrest stage to fruit maturity stage. Labeled fertilizer nitrogen was mainly distributed in the storage organs, followed by the vegetative organs. Reproductive organs had the lowest allocation in the experimental stage. For the three-years-old pear trees, the ratio of absorbed N from fertilizer was responsible for 31.1% and 21.0% of total absorbed nitrogen from budbreak to shoot growth arrest stage and from shoot growth arrest stage to fruit maturity stage, respectively, with the remaining N (68.9% and 79.0% of total) being absorbed from soil N.