Wheat stems serve as a store for fructans to buffer the plant
against nutritional and environmental influences. It has
been suggested that fructan storage influences yield stability and tolerance
of environmental factors. Near infra-red spectroscopy (NIR) analysis provides
a rapid and accurate assessment of the fructan content of the wheat stem,
as well as allowing detection of growth-limiting nutrient stresses, and so
is proving to be a useful technique for
making crop management decisions. Commercial laboratories using NIR analysis
have been tissue-testing crops
in the eastern Australian wheat belt since 1993. In healthy, normally
developing crops not under stress there is
a predictable relationship between nitrogen and fructan. Investigation of the
nitrogen and fructan concentrations
in commercial crops has confirmed an inverse relationship between these
two constituents. The function:
Fructan (%)=a+bN%+cN%2
accounted for up to 81% of variation in tissue fructan concentration. In
commercial tissue-testing this relationship is used to detect crops under
stresses other than nitrogen deficiency.
If the fructan concentration deviates by more than 4%, cereal growers are
advised that their crop might be subject
to other stresses which might reduce its response to applied nitrogen.