Term
the most important factor to the low fertility of acid soil |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
this is often the most effective strategy for improving crop production on acid soils. |
|
Definition
combining the use of Al tolerant cultivars with liming, since the application of lime is often not economically or physically feasible |
|
|
Term
this is needed for crops to be resistant to Al |
|
Definition
To breed genotypes with improved Al tolerance, reliable, efficient screening methods must be available to the researcher. |
|
|
Term
the pH that constitutes acid soils |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the amount of the world's ice-free land that has acid soil |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
global distribution of acid soils |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what most acid soils are found under |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
an example of how parent material can affect soil acidity |
|
Definition
Soils that develop from granite parent materials acidify at a faster rate than soils developed from calcareous parent materials. |
|
|
Term
why sandy soils acidify more rapidly |
|
Definition
Sandy soils with relatively few clay particles acidify more rapidly due to their smaller reservoir of alkaline cations and higher leaching potential. |
|
|
Term
some environmental things that acidify soil |
|
Definition
-High rainfall affects the rate of soil acidification depending on the rate of water percolation through the soil profile.
-Organic matter decaying to form carbonic acid and other weak acids also contributes to acidification.
-hydrolyzation of Al
-Net H+ production occurs through natural processes such as nitrification of ammonical nitrogen. |
|
|
Term
some agricultural things that acidify soil |
|
Definition
-Soil acidification is intensified by the removal of cations through the harvesting of crops and by acid precipitation from polluted air. -Soil acidification is often accelerated by certain cropping practices such as repeated applications of nitrogen in amounts that exceed crop uptake. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a material whose Ca and Mg compounds are capable of neutralizing soil acidity |
|
|
Term
The bulk of agricultural lime comes from... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
some materials other than lime that are used to neutralize soil acidity |
|
Definition
-marl -slag from iron and steel making -flue dust from cement plants -refuse from sugar beet factories, paper mills, calcium carbide plants, rock wool plants, and water softening plants |
|
|
Term
why it's good to use management practices that optimize N-use efficiency and ultimately reduce the amount of NO3- lost through leaching |
|
Definition
because they could slow the rate of acidification |
|
|
Term
Acid soils are phytotoxic as a result of... |
|
Definition
nutritional disorders, deficiencies, or unavailability of essential nutrients such as calcium, magnesium, molybdenum, and phosphorus, and toxicity of aluminum, manganese, and hydrogen activity. |
|
|
Term
this is considered the most important growth-limiting factor for plants in acid soils |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The primary response to aluminum stress occurs in... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
description of Al-injured roots |
|
Definition
-stubby -brittle -Root tips and lateral roots thicken and turn brown. -The root system as a whole is affected, with many stubby lateral roots and no fine branching. -Such roots are inefficient in absorbing nutrients and water. |
|
|
Term
The main symptom of Al toxicity |
|
Definition
rapid inhibition of root growth |
|
|
Term
the critical site on the root for Al toxicity |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the part of the corn root that must be exposed to Al to be affected by Al toxicity |
|
Definition
the terminal 2 to 3 mm of the root (root cap and meristem) |
|
|
Term
does the root cap provide protection against Al damage? |
|
Definition
may or may not, depending on the study |
|
|
Term
how the root cap may provide protection against Al damage |
|
Definition
through its involvement in signal perception and hormone distribution |
|
|
Term
types of aluminum tolerance mechanisms |
|
Definition
-external tolerance mechanisms -internal tolerance mechanisms |
|
|
Term
external tolerance mechanisms |
|
Definition
mechanisms that facilitate Al exclusion from the root apex |
|
|
Term
internal tolerance mechanisms |
|
Definition
mechanisms that confer the ability to tolerate Al in the plant symplasm |
|
|
Term
some external tolerance mechanisms by plant roots against Al |
|
Definition
1) exudation of organic acids 2) immobilization at the cell wall 3) exudation of phosphate 4) active Al efflux across the plasma membrane 5) production of root mucilage 6) Al exclusion via alterations in rhizosphere pH 7) selective permeability of the plasma membrane |
|
|
Term
some internal tolerance mechanisms by plant roots against Al |
|
Definition
-Al-binding proteins -chelation in the cytosol -compartmentation in the vacuole -evolution of Al tolerant enzymes -elevated enzyme activity |
|
|
Term
the only reasonable solution to the problem of acid subsoil |
|
Definition
Selection and development of genotypes with enhanced tolerance to acid soils and toxic levels of Al |
|
|
Term
some methods for screening for Al tolerance |
|
Definition
-cell and tissue culture -nutrient solution culture -soil bioassays -field evaluations -Laboratory- and greenhouse-based techniques for screening for Al tolerance -field-based techniques |
|
|
Term
Nutrient solution culture |
|
Definition
By far the most common screening medium for Al tolerance is solution culture, which provides easy access to the root system, strict control over nutrient availability and pH, and non-destructive measurements of tolerance. |
|
|
Term
where a plant's primary response to Al stress occurs |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
when soil bioassays have a distinct advantage over nutrient solution culture |
|
Definition
when Al tolerance may be influenced by soil dependent external factors |
|
|
Term
The ultimate and most direct method of evaluating for Al tolerance |
|
Definition
by measuring economic yield (forage or grain) under field conditions. |
|
|