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 Tomorrows soybean fields
could sprout new, non-nodulating soybean cultivars that will have a good
capacity to recover applied nitrogen from soil. Click the image for more
information about it. |
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New Soybean Pulls Nitrogen from Soil, Not
Air
By Rosalie
Marion Bliss December 4, 2006
Growers may soon have the option of planting a non-transgenically
modified soybean variety that improves recovery of nitrogen from land-applied
animal waste. That's thanks to a newly released soybean germplasm that removes
large amounts of nitrogen applied to soil. If developed into a new cultivar, it
could become an ideal candidate for animal producers managing waste generated
by their operations.
The Agricultural Research Service (ARS) released the soybean germplasm, called
Nitrasoy, in conjunction with the
North Carolina
Agricultural Research Service at North
Carolina State University in Raleigh. Agronomist
Joseph
Burton, physiologist
Daniel
Israel and microbiologist
Paul
Bishop developed the germplasm. They are with the ARS
Soybean
and Nitrogen Fixation Research Unit in Raleigh.
Today's commercial nodulating soybean varieties forge a give-and-take
relationship with bacteria, called rhizobia, that thrive in the plants' root
nodules in soil. The bacteria turn nitrogen gaswhich makes up about 80
percent of the atmosphereinto nitrogen fertilizer that the plant can use
to make proteins.
Uniquely, Nitrasoy is a non-nodulating soybean germplasm with a large
requirement for soil-applied nitrogen to obtain excellent seed yield. Its
capacity to recover applied nitrogen from soil reduces the risk of possible
nitrate pollution of groundwater.
In field tests, Nitrasoy accumulated up to 17 percent more
soil-applied nitrogen in its seed than did its parent, D68-0099. In other
tests, Nitrasoy was No. 1 in average seed yield when compared to three other
genotypes, after each had been fertilized with swine-lagoon effluent.
Nitrasoy seed has been deposited in the
National
Center for Genetic Resources Preservation and the
National Plant Germplasm System.
Nitrasoy seeds are available for research purposes from the ARS lab in Raleigh.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.