Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures

The degradation of tropical pastures sown with introduced grasses (e.g., Urochloa spp.) has dramatic environmental and economic consequences in Latin America. Nitrogen (N) limitation to plant growth contributes to pasture degradation. The introduction of legumes in association with grasses has be...

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Main Authors: Villegas, Daniel Mauricio, Velásquez, Jaime E., Arango, Jacobo, Obregon, Karen, Rao, Idupulapati M., Rosas, Gelber, Oberson, Astrid
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: MDPI 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110413
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author Villegas, Daniel Mauricio
Velásquez, Jaime E.
Arango, Jacobo
Obregon, Karen
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Rosas, Gelber
Oberson, Astrid
author_browse Arango, Jacobo
Oberson, Astrid
Obregon, Karen
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Rosas, Gelber
Velásquez, Jaime E.
Villegas, Daniel Mauricio
author_facet Villegas, Daniel Mauricio
Velásquez, Jaime E.
Arango, Jacobo
Obregon, Karen
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Rosas, Gelber
Oberson, Astrid
author_sort Villegas, Daniel Mauricio
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The degradation of tropical pastures sown with introduced grasses (e.g., Urochloa spp.) has dramatic environmental and economic consequences in Latin America. Nitrogen (N) limitation to plant growth contributes to pasture degradation. The introduction of legumes in association with grasses has been proposed as a strategy to improve N supply via symbiotic N2 fixation, but the fixed N input and N benefits for associated grasses have hardly been determined in farmers’ pastures. We have carried out on-farm research in ten paired plots of grass-alone (GA) vs. grass-legume (GL) pastures. Measurements included soil properties, pasture productivity, and sources of plant N uptake using 15N isotope natural abundance methods. The integration of legumes increased pasture biomass production by about 74%, while N uptake was improved by two-fold. The legumes derived about 80% of their N via symbiotic N2 fixation. The isotopic signature of N of grasses in GA vs. GL pastures suggested that sources of grass N are affected by sward composition. Low values of δ 15N found in some grasses in GA pastures indicate that they depend, to some extent, on N from non-symbiotic N2 fixation, while δ 15N signatures of grasses in GL pastures pointed to N transfer to grass from the associated legume. The role of different soil–plant processes such as biological nitrification inhibition (BNI), non-symbiotic N2 fixation by GA pastures and legume–N transfer to grasses in GL pastures need to be further studied to provide a more comprehensive understanding of N sources supporting the growth of grasses in tropical pastures.
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spelling CGSpace1104132025-11-11T18:50:50Z Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures Villegas, Daniel Mauricio Velásquez, Jaime E. Arango, Jacobo Obregon, Karen Rao, Idupulapati M. Rosas, Gelber Oberson, Astrid biological nitrogen fixation fijación biológica del nitrógeno The degradation of tropical pastures sown with introduced grasses (e.g., Urochloa spp.) has dramatic environmental and economic consequences in Latin America. Nitrogen (N) limitation to plant growth contributes to pasture degradation. The introduction of legumes in association with grasses has been proposed as a strategy to improve N supply via symbiotic N2 fixation, but the fixed N input and N benefits for associated grasses have hardly been determined in farmers’ pastures. We have carried out on-farm research in ten paired plots of grass-alone (GA) vs. grass-legume (GL) pastures. Measurements included soil properties, pasture productivity, and sources of plant N uptake using 15N isotope natural abundance methods. The integration of legumes increased pasture biomass production by about 74%, while N uptake was improved by two-fold. The legumes derived about 80% of their N via symbiotic N2 fixation. The isotopic signature of N of grasses in GA vs. GL pastures suggested that sources of grass N are affected by sward composition. Low values of δ 15N found in some grasses in GA pastures indicate that they depend, to some extent, on N from non-symbiotic N2 fixation, while δ 15N signatures of grasses in GL pastures pointed to N transfer to grass from the associated legume. The role of different soil–plant processes such as biological nitrification inhibition (BNI), non-symbiotic N2 fixation by GA pastures and legume–N transfer to grasses in GL pastures need to be further studied to provide a more comprehensive understanding of N sources supporting the growth of grasses in tropical pastures. 2020-11-05 2020-12-04T22:47:47Z 2020-12-04T22:47:47Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110413 en Open Access application/pdf MDPI Villegas, D.M.; Velasquez, J.; Arango, J.; Obregon, K.; Rao, I.M.; Rosas, G.; Oberson, A. (2020) Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures. Diversity 12(11) 419. ISSN: 1424-2818
spellingShingle biological nitrogen fixation
fijación biológica del nitrógeno
Villegas, Daniel Mauricio
Velásquez, Jaime E.
Arango, Jacobo
Obregon, Karen
Rao, Idupulapati M.
Rosas, Gelber
Oberson, Astrid
Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures
title Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures
title_full Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures
title_fullStr Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures
title_full_unstemmed Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures
title_short Urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures
title_sort urochloa grasses swap nitrogen source when grown in association with legumes in tropical pastures
topic biological nitrogen fixation
fijación biológica del nitrógeno
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110413
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