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Get Free AccessPlant roots interact with rhizosphere microorganisms to accelerate soil organic matter (SOM) mineralization for nutrient acquisition. Root-mediated changes in SOM mineralization largely depend on root-derived carbon (root-C) input and soil nutrient status. Hence, intraspecific competition over plant development and spatiotemporal variability in the root-C input and nutrients uptake may modify SOM mineralization. To investigate the effect of intraspecific competition on SOM mineralization at three growth stages (heading, flowering, and ripening), we grew maize (C4 plant) under three planting densities on a C3 soil and determined in situ soil C- and N-mineralization by 13 C-natural abundance and 15 N-pool dilution approaches. From heading to ripening, soil C- and N-mineralization rates exhibit similar unimodal trends and were tightly coupled. The C-to-N-mineralization ratio (0.6 to 2.6) increased with N availability, indicating that an increase in N-mineralization with N depletion was driven by microorganisms mining N-rich SOM. With the intraspecific competition, plants increased specific root lengths as an efficient strategy to compete for resources. Root morphologic traits rather than root biomass per se were positively related to C- and N-mineralization. Overall, plant phenology and intraspecific competition controlled the intensity and mechanisms of soil C- and N- mineralization by the adaptation of root traits and nutrient mining.
Yue Sun, Huadong Zang, Thomas Splettstößer, Amit Kumar, Xingliang Xu, Yakov Kuzyakov, Johanna Pausch (2020). Plant intraspecific competition and growth stage alter carbon and nitrogen mineralization in the rhizosphere. Plant Cell & Environment, 44(4), pp. 1231-1242, DOI: 10.1111/pce.13945.
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Type
Article
Year
2020
Authors
7
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Plant Cell & Environment
DOI
10.1111/pce.13945
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