Root exudation patterns in a beech forest: Dependence on soil depth, root morphology, and environment

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Root exudation patterns in a beech forest : Dependence on soil depth, root morphology, and environment. / Tückmantel, Timo; Leuschner, Christoph; Preusser, Sebastian; Kandeler, Ellen; Angst, Gerrit; Mueller, Carsten W.; Meier, Ina Christin.

In: Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Vol. 107, 01.04.2017, p. 188-197.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tückmantel, T, Leuschner, C, Preusser, S, Kandeler, E, Angst, G, Mueller, CW & Meier, IC 2017, 'Root exudation patterns in a beech forest: Dependence on soil depth, root morphology, and environment', Soil Biology and Biochemistry, vol. 107, pp. 188-197. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.01.006

APA

Tückmantel, T., Leuschner, C., Preusser, S., Kandeler, E., Angst, G., Mueller, C. W., & Meier, I. C. (2017). Root exudation patterns in a beech forest: Dependence on soil depth, root morphology, and environment. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 107, 188-197. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.01.006

Vancouver

Tückmantel T, Leuschner C, Preusser S, Kandeler E, Angst G, Mueller CW et al. Root exudation patterns in a beech forest: Dependence on soil depth, root morphology, and environment. Soil Biology and Biochemistry. 2017 Apr 1;107:188-197. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.01.006

Author

Tückmantel, Timo ; Leuschner, Christoph ; Preusser, Sebastian ; Kandeler, Ellen ; Angst, Gerrit ; Mueller, Carsten W. ; Meier, Ina Christin. / Root exudation patterns in a beech forest : Dependence on soil depth, root morphology, and environment. In: Soil Biology and Biochemistry. 2017 ; Vol. 107. pp. 188-197.

Bibtex

@article{671cfd847d1b43bfb717462c59f44f6b,
title = "Root exudation patterns in a beech forest: Dependence on soil depth, root morphology, and environment",
abstract = "Forest subsoils may represent an important C sink in a warming world, but rhizodeposition as the key biogeochemical process determining the C sink strength of mature forests has not yet been quantified in subsoils. According to studies conducted in topsoil or laboratory experiments, soil C inputs by root exudation are increasing with increasing temperature and decreasing nutrient availability. We examined whether these relationships apply to forest subsoil by analyzing the response of root exudation to increasing soil depth up to 130 cm in a mature European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) forest. In two subsequent growing seasons differing in temperature and precipitation, we investigated in situ root exudation with a cuvette-based method and analyzed root morphology, microbial biomass, and soil nutrient availability. We proved that root exudation greatly decreases with soil depth as a consequence of a significant decrease in root-mass specific exudation activity to nearly a fifth of topsoil activity. The decrease in specific metabolic activity from 312 mg C g−1 yr−1 in the topsoil to 80 mg C g−1 yr−1 at 130 cm depth was amplified by an exponential decrease in root biomass per soil volume, leading to a relative decrease in root exudation per volume in the deep subsoil to 2% of topsoil root exudation (1 g C 10 cm−1 m−2 yr−1 at 130 cm depth). Specific root area decreased and mean fine root diameter and root tissue density increased with soil depth, indicating a shift in primary root functionality from fibrous roots in the topsoil to pioneer roots in the subsoil. The decrease in root exudation was accompanied by decreases in soil microbial biomass, extractable organic C (EOC), and N and P availability and increases in the aromatic C portion in SOM, but it did not relate to seasonal differences in climatic conditions. More specifically, it responded positively to an increase in EOC and ETN in the topsoil, but remained at its minimum rate in the SOC-poor subsoil, probably due to a lower organic N and higher mineral N content. The vertical pattern of beech root exudation is in accordance with a strategy to maximize whole-tree carbon-use efficiency, as it reduces C loss by exudation in soil spots where positive priming effects are unlikely, but enhances C exudation where microbes can mine less bioavailable SOM. The exudation patterns further suggest that increased C allocation to root systems as a likely tree response to elevated atmospheric [CO2] may not lead to enhanced soil C input by root exudation to subsoils poor in SOM.",
keywords = "Fagus sylvatica, Nitrogen, Pioneer roots, Rhizodeposition, SOC, Subsoil",
author = "Timo T{\"u}ckmantel and Christoph Leuschner and Sebastian Preusser and Ellen Kandeler and Gerrit Angst and Mueller, {Carsten W.} and Meier, {Ina Christin}",
year = "2017",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.01.006",
language = "English",
volume = "107",
pages = "188--197",
journal = "Soil Biology & Biochemistry",
issn = "0038-0717",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Root exudation patterns in a beech forest

T2 - Dependence on soil depth, root morphology, and environment

AU - Tückmantel, Timo

AU - Leuschner, Christoph

AU - Preusser, Sebastian

AU - Kandeler, Ellen

AU - Angst, Gerrit

AU - Mueller, Carsten W.

AU - Meier, Ina Christin

PY - 2017/4/1

Y1 - 2017/4/1

N2 - Forest subsoils may represent an important C sink in a warming world, but rhizodeposition as the key biogeochemical process determining the C sink strength of mature forests has not yet been quantified in subsoils. According to studies conducted in topsoil or laboratory experiments, soil C inputs by root exudation are increasing with increasing temperature and decreasing nutrient availability. We examined whether these relationships apply to forest subsoil by analyzing the response of root exudation to increasing soil depth up to 130 cm in a mature European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) forest. In two subsequent growing seasons differing in temperature and precipitation, we investigated in situ root exudation with a cuvette-based method and analyzed root morphology, microbial biomass, and soil nutrient availability. We proved that root exudation greatly decreases with soil depth as a consequence of a significant decrease in root-mass specific exudation activity to nearly a fifth of topsoil activity. The decrease in specific metabolic activity from 312 mg C g−1 yr−1 in the topsoil to 80 mg C g−1 yr−1 at 130 cm depth was amplified by an exponential decrease in root biomass per soil volume, leading to a relative decrease in root exudation per volume in the deep subsoil to 2% of topsoil root exudation (1 g C 10 cm−1 m−2 yr−1 at 130 cm depth). Specific root area decreased and mean fine root diameter and root tissue density increased with soil depth, indicating a shift in primary root functionality from fibrous roots in the topsoil to pioneer roots in the subsoil. The decrease in root exudation was accompanied by decreases in soil microbial biomass, extractable organic C (EOC), and N and P availability and increases in the aromatic C portion in SOM, but it did not relate to seasonal differences in climatic conditions. More specifically, it responded positively to an increase in EOC and ETN in the topsoil, but remained at its minimum rate in the SOC-poor subsoil, probably due to a lower organic N and higher mineral N content. The vertical pattern of beech root exudation is in accordance with a strategy to maximize whole-tree carbon-use efficiency, as it reduces C loss by exudation in soil spots where positive priming effects are unlikely, but enhances C exudation where microbes can mine less bioavailable SOM. The exudation patterns further suggest that increased C allocation to root systems as a likely tree response to elevated atmospheric [CO2] may not lead to enhanced soil C input by root exudation to subsoils poor in SOM.

AB - Forest subsoils may represent an important C sink in a warming world, but rhizodeposition as the key biogeochemical process determining the C sink strength of mature forests has not yet been quantified in subsoils. According to studies conducted in topsoil or laboratory experiments, soil C inputs by root exudation are increasing with increasing temperature and decreasing nutrient availability. We examined whether these relationships apply to forest subsoil by analyzing the response of root exudation to increasing soil depth up to 130 cm in a mature European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) forest. In two subsequent growing seasons differing in temperature and precipitation, we investigated in situ root exudation with a cuvette-based method and analyzed root morphology, microbial biomass, and soil nutrient availability. We proved that root exudation greatly decreases with soil depth as a consequence of a significant decrease in root-mass specific exudation activity to nearly a fifth of topsoil activity. The decrease in specific metabolic activity from 312 mg C g−1 yr−1 in the topsoil to 80 mg C g−1 yr−1 at 130 cm depth was amplified by an exponential decrease in root biomass per soil volume, leading to a relative decrease in root exudation per volume in the deep subsoil to 2% of topsoil root exudation (1 g C 10 cm−1 m−2 yr−1 at 130 cm depth). Specific root area decreased and mean fine root diameter and root tissue density increased with soil depth, indicating a shift in primary root functionality from fibrous roots in the topsoil to pioneer roots in the subsoil. The decrease in root exudation was accompanied by decreases in soil microbial biomass, extractable organic C (EOC), and N and P availability and increases in the aromatic C portion in SOM, but it did not relate to seasonal differences in climatic conditions. More specifically, it responded positively to an increase in EOC and ETN in the topsoil, but remained at its minimum rate in the SOC-poor subsoil, probably due to a lower organic N and higher mineral N content. The vertical pattern of beech root exudation is in accordance with a strategy to maximize whole-tree carbon-use efficiency, as it reduces C loss by exudation in soil spots where positive priming effects are unlikely, but enhances C exudation where microbes can mine less bioavailable SOM. The exudation patterns further suggest that increased C allocation to root systems as a likely tree response to elevated atmospheric [CO2] may not lead to enhanced soil C input by root exudation to subsoils poor in SOM.

KW - Fagus sylvatica

KW - Nitrogen

KW - Pioneer roots

KW - Rhizodeposition

KW - SOC

KW - Subsoil

U2 - 10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.01.006

DO - 10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.01.006

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85009868988

VL - 107

SP - 188

EP - 197

JO - Soil Biology & Biochemistry

JF - Soil Biology & Biochemistry

SN - 0038-0717

ER -

ID: 239160696