What controls the availability of organic and inorganic P sources in top- and subsoils? A 33P isotopic labeling study with root exudate addition

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Juanjuan Ai
  • Callum C. Banfield
  • Guodong Shao
  • Kazem Zamanian
  • Tobias Stürzebecher
  • Lingling Shi
  • Lichao Fan
  • Xia Liu
  • Sandra Spielvogel
  • Michaela A. Dippold

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences
  • Shandong Normal University
  • University of Tübingen
  • University of Göttingen
  • Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology
  • Northwest Agriculture and Forestry University
  • Kiel University
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number109129
JournalSoil Biology and Biochemistry
Volume185
Early online date27 Jul 2023
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2023

Abstract

Phosphorus (P) is a major limiting nutrient for plant growth implying an often-intensive competition between microorganisms and plants in the rhizosphere. Increasing the P availability in subsoils may help to mitigate potential future P fertilizer shortages and to overcome P limitations due to droughts, which mainly affect topsoils. Root exudates provide easily available carbon and energy sources for microorganisms to mobilize soil nutrients. Nonetheless, details regarding the distinct processes underlying P mobilization from various P sources (free vs. sorbed PO43−; low molecular vs. complex organic P, e.g. ATP vs. plant litter P) as affected by root exudates are poorly understood, especially in subsoils. This study aimed to identify the controlling factors and microbial processes regulating the availability of organic and inorganic P in top- and subsoils by 33P isotopic labeling. The focus was on the potential key role of root exudates in P mobilization. We found that microbial communities in top- and subsoils used high- and low-available mineral P to a similar extent, but that the subsoil communities were much more efficient in mobilizing and incorporating complex litter-derived organic P. This capability of subsoil communities was even enhanced when root exudates were present. Microbial activity and nutrient-mobilizing mechanisms (e.g., P-related enzymes) clearly increased by root exudate addition, an effect that was generally higher in sub-than in topsoils. We conclude that subsoil communities are well capable of mobilizing and using complex organic P sources, especially if root exudates accelerate overall activity and P cycling. Thus, high root exudation is highly relevant for crops, which depend on subsoil nutrients and litter-derived P. Accordingly, detritusphere P, e.g. in subsoil root channels, is likely to be plant-available because of exudate-induced microbial P (re-)cycling processes.

Keywords

    P labeling, Enzyme activity, Microbial biomass, Microbial community, Root exudates, Subsoil

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Sustainable Development Goals

Cite this

What controls the availability of organic and inorganic P sources in top- and subsoils? A 33P isotopic labeling study with root exudate addition. / Ai, Juanjuan; Banfield, Callum C.; Shao, Guodong et al.
In: Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Vol. 185, 109129, 10.2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Ai J, Banfield CC, Shao G, Zamanian K, Stürzebecher T, Shi L et al. What controls the availability of organic and inorganic P sources in top- and subsoils? A 33P isotopic labeling study with root exudate addition. Soil Biology and Biochemistry. 2023 Oct;185:109129. Epub 2023 Jul 27. doi: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2023.109129
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title = "What controls the availability of organic and inorganic P sources in top- and subsoils? A 33P isotopic labeling study with root exudate addition",
abstract = "Phosphorus (P) is a major limiting nutrient for plant growth implying an often-intensive competition between microorganisms and plants in the rhizosphere. Increasing the P availability in subsoils may help to mitigate potential future P fertilizer shortages and to overcome P limitations due to droughts, which mainly affect topsoils. Root exudates provide easily available carbon and energy sources for microorganisms to mobilize soil nutrients. Nonetheless, details regarding the distinct processes underlying P mobilization from various P sources (free vs. sorbed PO43−; low molecular vs. complex organic P, e.g. ATP vs. plant litter P) as affected by root exudates are poorly understood, especially in subsoils. This study aimed to identify the controlling factors and microbial processes regulating the availability of organic and inorganic P in top- and subsoils by 33P isotopic labeling. The focus was on the potential key role of root exudates in P mobilization. We found that microbial communities in top- and subsoils used high- and low-available mineral P to a similar extent, but that the subsoil communities were much more efficient in mobilizing and incorporating complex litter-derived organic P. This capability of subsoil communities was even enhanced when root exudates were present. Microbial activity and nutrient-mobilizing mechanisms (e.g., P-related enzymes) clearly increased by root exudate addition, an effect that was generally higher in sub-than in topsoils. We conclude that subsoil communities are well capable of mobilizing and using complex organic P sources, especially if root exudates accelerate overall activity and P cycling. Thus, high root exudation is highly relevant for crops, which depend on subsoil nutrients and litter-derived P. Accordingly, detritusphere P, e.g. in subsoil root channels, is likely to be plant-available because of exudate-induced microbial P (re-)cycling processes.",
keywords = "P labeling, Enzyme activity, Microbial biomass, Microbial community, Root exudates, Subsoil",
author = "Juanjuan Ai and Banfield, {Callum C.} and Guodong Shao and Kazem Zamanian and Tobias St{\"u}rzebecher and Lingling Shi and Lichao Fan and Xia Liu and Sandra Spielvogel and Dippold, {Michaela A.}",
note = "Funding Information: This work was financially supported by the project “RootWays” (project number: 031B0911C ) of the BMBF funded Rhizo4Bio initative coordinated by the BONARES center. Michaela Dippold was funded by the Robert-Bosch- Foundation (More crop per drop for sub-Saharan Africa). Kazem Zamanian was funded by Research Fund for International Young Scientists of National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) ( 42050410320 ), and Xia Liu funded by Shandong Provincial Major Scientific and Technological Innovation Project ( 2022CXGC010607 ), Shandong Provincial “Bohai Granary” Science and Technology Demonstration Project ( 2019BHLC003 ), Shandong Provincial Agricultural Major Applied Technology Innovation Project ( SD2019ZZ013 ). We gratefully acknowledge the funding by the Bayer Foundation for Juanjuan Ai. We also thank the China Scholarship Council (CSC) for funding Juanjuan Ai's stay in Germany. The authors would like to thank Meisam Nazari for providing maize mucilage, and also Xiaona Song, Jie Zhou, Xuechen Zhang for help and support during data analysis, Karin Schmidt and Susann Enzmann for laboratory assistance. ",
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TY - JOUR

T1 - What controls the availability of organic and inorganic P sources in top- and subsoils? A 33P isotopic labeling study with root exudate addition

AU - Ai, Juanjuan

AU - Banfield, Callum C.

AU - Shao, Guodong

AU - Zamanian, Kazem

AU - Stürzebecher, Tobias

AU - Shi, Lingling

AU - Fan, Lichao

AU - Liu, Xia

AU - Spielvogel, Sandra

AU - Dippold, Michaela A.

N1 - Funding Information: This work was financially supported by the project “RootWays” (project number: 031B0911C ) of the BMBF funded Rhizo4Bio initative coordinated by the BONARES center. Michaela Dippold was funded by the Robert-Bosch- Foundation (More crop per drop for sub-Saharan Africa). Kazem Zamanian was funded by Research Fund for International Young Scientists of National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) ( 42050410320 ), and Xia Liu funded by Shandong Provincial Major Scientific and Technological Innovation Project ( 2022CXGC010607 ), Shandong Provincial “Bohai Granary” Science and Technology Demonstration Project ( 2019BHLC003 ), Shandong Provincial Agricultural Major Applied Technology Innovation Project ( SD2019ZZ013 ). We gratefully acknowledge the funding by the Bayer Foundation for Juanjuan Ai. We also thank the China Scholarship Council (CSC) for funding Juanjuan Ai's stay in Germany. The authors would like to thank Meisam Nazari for providing maize mucilage, and also Xiaona Song, Jie Zhou, Xuechen Zhang for help and support during data analysis, Karin Schmidt and Susann Enzmann for laboratory assistance.

PY - 2023/10

Y1 - 2023/10

N2 - Phosphorus (P) is a major limiting nutrient for plant growth implying an often-intensive competition between microorganisms and plants in the rhizosphere. Increasing the P availability in subsoils may help to mitigate potential future P fertilizer shortages and to overcome P limitations due to droughts, which mainly affect topsoils. Root exudates provide easily available carbon and energy sources for microorganisms to mobilize soil nutrients. Nonetheless, details regarding the distinct processes underlying P mobilization from various P sources (free vs. sorbed PO43−; low molecular vs. complex organic P, e.g. ATP vs. plant litter P) as affected by root exudates are poorly understood, especially in subsoils. This study aimed to identify the controlling factors and microbial processes regulating the availability of organic and inorganic P in top- and subsoils by 33P isotopic labeling. The focus was on the potential key role of root exudates in P mobilization. We found that microbial communities in top- and subsoils used high- and low-available mineral P to a similar extent, but that the subsoil communities were much more efficient in mobilizing and incorporating complex litter-derived organic P. This capability of subsoil communities was even enhanced when root exudates were present. Microbial activity and nutrient-mobilizing mechanisms (e.g., P-related enzymes) clearly increased by root exudate addition, an effect that was generally higher in sub-than in topsoils. We conclude that subsoil communities are well capable of mobilizing and using complex organic P sources, especially if root exudates accelerate overall activity and P cycling. Thus, high root exudation is highly relevant for crops, which depend on subsoil nutrients and litter-derived P. Accordingly, detritusphere P, e.g. in subsoil root channels, is likely to be plant-available because of exudate-induced microbial P (re-)cycling processes.

AB - Phosphorus (P) is a major limiting nutrient for plant growth implying an often-intensive competition between microorganisms and plants in the rhizosphere. Increasing the P availability in subsoils may help to mitigate potential future P fertilizer shortages and to overcome P limitations due to droughts, which mainly affect topsoils. Root exudates provide easily available carbon and energy sources for microorganisms to mobilize soil nutrients. Nonetheless, details regarding the distinct processes underlying P mobilization from various P sources (free vs. sorbed PO43−; low molecular vs. complex organic P, e.g. ATP vs. plant litter P) as affected by root exudates are poorly understood, especially in subsoils. This study aimed to identify the controlling factors and microbial processes regulating the availability of organic and inorganic P in top- and subsoils by 33P isotopic labeling. The focus was on the potential key role of root exudates in P mobilization. We found that microbial communities in top- and subsoils used high- and low-available mineral P to a similar extent, but that the subsoil communities were much more efficient in mobilizing and incorporating complex litter-derived organic P. This capability of subsoil communities was even enhanced when root exudates were present. Microbial activity and nutrient-mobilizing mechanisms (e.g., P-related enzymes) clearly increased by root exudate addition, an effect that was generally higher in sub-than in topsoils. We conclude that subsoil communities are well capable of mobilizing and using complex organic P sources, especially if root exudates accelerate overall activity and P cycling. Thus, high root exudation is highly relevant for crops, which depend on subsoil nutrients and litter-derived P. Accordingly, detritusphere P, e.g. in subsoil root channels, is likely to be plant-available because of exudate-induced microbial P (re-)cycling processes.

KW - P labeling

KW - Enzyme activity

KW - Microbial biomass

KW - Microbial community

KW - Root exudates

KW - Subsoil

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U2 - 10.1016/j.soilbio.2023.109129

DO - 10.1016/j.soilbio.2023.109129

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85166655219

VL - 185

JO - Soil Biology and Biochemistry

JF - Soil Biology and Biochemistry

SN - 0038-0717

M1 - 109129

ER -

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