Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden

The ability of wild indigenous legumes to form root nodules capable of biological nitrogen (N 2 ) fixation has rarely been demonstrated for species in natural ecosystems in large parts of Europe. In order to understand and manage these ecosystems, it is important to demonstrate nodulation across a d...

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Published in:Symbiosis
Main Authors: Ampomah, Osei Y., James, Euan K., Iannetta, Pietro P.M., Kenicer, Gregory, Sprent, Janet I., Huss-Danell, Kerstin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ciencia.ucp.pt/en/publications/31820ebe-bc30-4b94-b0ab-1ac34684216f
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13199-012-0188-9
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84868194252&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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spelling ftucplisboacris:oai:ciencia.ucp.pt:publications/31820ebe-bc30-4b94-b0ab-1ac34684216f 2024-05-12T08:00:19+00:00 Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden Ampomah, Osei Y. James, Euan K. Iannetta, Pietro P.M. Kenicer, Gregory Sprent, Janet I. Huss-Danell, Kerstin 2012-07 https://ciencia.ucp.pt/en/publications/31820ebe-bc30-4b94-b0ab-1ac34684216f https://doi.org/10.1007/s13199-012-0188-9 http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84868194252&partnerID=8YFLogxK eng eng https://ciencia.ucp.pt/en/publications/31820ebe-bc30-4b94-b0ab-1ac34684216f info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Ampomah , O Y , James , E K , Iannetta , P P M , Kenicer , G , Sprent , J I & Huss-Danell , K 2012 , ' Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden ' , Symbiosis , vol. 57 , no. 3 , pp. 133-148 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s13199-012-0188-9 Nitrogen fixation Nitrogenase Nodulation Nodule structure Root nodule bacteria Wild legumes article 2012 ftucplisboacris https://doi.org/10.1007/s13199-012-0188-9 2024-04-16T02:54:49Z The ability of wild indigenous legumes to form root nodules capable of biological nitrogen (N 2 ) fixation has rarely been demonstrated for species in natural ecosystems in large parts of Europe. In order to understand and manage these ecosystems, it is important to demonstrate nodulation across a diverse range of environments, sites and climates. This study surveyed nodulation at a number of sites in Scotland and Sweden. Presence of nodules was noted and nodule structure and indicators of nitrogen fixation capacity were assessed using light and transmission electron microscopy. Soils from several sites were also sampled for carbon and nitrogen analysis. The collections comprised 24 species in Scotland, and 30 taxa in Sweden; 17 of these in common for both countries. Highest species numbers occurred in meadows, farmland margins, hedgerows, roadsides and wasteland. Coastal sites and sites in the mountainous region above the Arctic Circle hosted several rare species. All sampled species had features of N 2 -fixing nodules such as pink colour (leghaemoglobin) when dissected and bacteroids. Nodule structure for a number of species is here reported for the first time and presence of the N 2 -fixing enzyme nitrogenase is demonstrated in three previously not studied Swedish legume species. North European legumes may make significant contributions to the N-budgets of their ecosystems. Such species (and their symbionts) represent unique germplasm that may be adopted to empower advances in agriculture and conservation aimed at mitigation and adaptation to the effects of climate change. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change Research at Universidade Católica Portuguesa (Ciência-UCP) Arctic Symbiosis 57 3 133 148
institution Open Polar
collection Research at Universidade Católica Portuguesa (Ciência-UCP)
op_collection_id ftucplisboacris
language English
topic Nitrogen fixation
Nitrogenase
Nodulation
Nodule structure
Root nodule bacteria
Wild legumes
spellingShingle Nitrogen fixation
Nitrogenase
Nodulation
Nodule structure
Root nodule bacteria
Wild legumes
Ampomah, Osei Y.
James, Euan K.
Iannetta, Pietro P.M.
Kenicer, Gregory
Sprent, Janet I.
Huss-Danell, Kerstin
Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden
topic_facet Nitrogen fixation
Nitrogenase
Nodulation
Nodule structure
Root nodule bacteria
Wild legumes
description The ability of wild indigenous legumes to form root nodules capable of biological nitrogen (N 2 ) fixation has rarely been demonstrated for species in natural ecosystems in large parts of Europe. In order to understand and manage these ecosystems, it is important to demonstrate nodulation across a diverse range of environments, sites and climates. This study surveyed nodulation at a number of sites in Scotland and Sweden. Presence of nodules was noted and nodule structure and indicators of nitrogen fixation capacity were assessed using light and transmission electron microscopy. Soils from several sites were also sampled for carbon and nitrogen analysis. The collections comprised 24 species in Scotland, and 30 taxa in Sweden; 17 of these in common for both countries. Highest species numbers occurred in meadows, farmland margins, hedgerows, roadsides and wasteland. Coastal sites and sites in the mountainous region above the Arctic Circle hosted several rare species. All sampled species had features of N 2 -fixing nodules such as pink colour (leghaemoglobin) when dissected and bacteroids. Nodule structure for a number of species is here reported for the first time and presence of the N 2 -fixing enzyme nitrogenase is demonstrated in three previously not studied Swedish legume species. North European legumes may make significant contributions to the N-budgets of their ecosystems. Such species (and their symbionts) represent unique germplasm that may be adopted to empower advances in agriculture and conservation aimed at mitigation and adaptation to the effects of climate change.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ampomah, Osei Y.
James, Euan K.
Iannetta, Pietro P.M.
Kenicer, Gregory
Sprent, Janet I.
Huss-Danell, Kerstin
author_facet Ampomah, Osei Y.
James, Euan K.
Iannetta, Pietro P.M.
Kenicer, Gregory
Sprent, Janet I.
Huss-Danell, Kerstin
author_sort Ampomah, Osei Y.
title Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden
title_short Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden
title_full Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden
title_fullStr Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden
title_sort nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in scotland and sweden
publishDate 2012
url https://ciencia.ucp.pt/en/publications/31820ebe-bc30-4b94-b0ab-1ac34684216f
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13199-012-0188-9
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84868194252&partnerID=8YFLogxK
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
op_source Ampomah , O Y , James , E K , Iannetta , P P M , Kenicer , G , Sprent , J I & Huss-Danell , K 2012 , ' Nodulation and ecological significance of indigenous legumes in Scotland and Sweden ' , Symbiosis , vol. 57 , no. 3 , pp. 133-148 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s13199-012-0188-9
op_relation https://ciencia.ucp.pt/en/publications/31820ebe-bc30-4b94-b0ab-1ac34684216f
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container_title Symbiosis
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