Literature DB >> 33739617

Drought alters the carbon footprint of trees in soils-tracking the spatio-temporal fate of 13 C-labelled assimilates in the soil of an old-growth pine forest.

Decai Gao1,2, Jobin Joseph1, Roland A Werner3, Ivano Brunner1, Alois Zürcher1, Christian Hug1, Ao Wang1,4, Chunhong Zhao2, Edith Bai2, Katrin Meusburger1, Arthur Gessler1,4, Frank Hagedorn1.   

Abstract

Above and belowground compartments in ecosystems are closely coupled on daily to annual timescales. In mature forests, this interlinkage and how it is impacted by drought is still poorly understood. Here, we pulse-labelled 100-year-old trees with 13 CO2 within a 15-year-long irrigation experiment in a naturally dry pine forest to quantify how drought regime affects the transfer and use of assimilates from trees to the rhizosphere and associated microbial communities. It took 4 days until new 13 C-labelled assimilates were allocated to the rhizosphere. One year later, the 13 C signal of the 3-h long pulse labelling was still detectable in stem and soil respiration, which provides evidence that parts of the assimilates are stored in trees before they are used for metabolic processes in the rhizosphere. Irrigation removing the natural water stress reduced the mean C residence time from canopy uptake until soil respiration from 89 to 40 days. Moreover, irrigation increased the amount of assimilates transferred to and respired in the soil within the first 10 days by 370%. A small precipitation event rewetting surface soils altered this pattern rapidly and reduced the effect size to +35%. Microbial biomass incorporated 46 ± 5% and 31 ± 7% of the C used in the rhizosphere in the dry control and irrigation treatment respectively. Mapping the spatial distribution of soil-respired 13 CO2 around the 10 pulse-labelled trees showed that tree rhizospheres extended laterally 2.8 times beyond tree canopies, implying that there is a strong overlap of the rhizosphere among adjacent trees. Irrigation increased the rhizosphere area by 60%, which gives evidence of a long-term acclimation of trees and their rhizosphere to the drought regime. The moisture-sensitive transfer and use of C in the rhizosphere has consequences for C allocation within trees, soil microbial communities and soil carbon storage.
© 2021 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  carbon allocation; climate change; drought; forest; isotope tracing; mean; residence time; rhizosphere; roots; soil respiration

Year:  2021        PMID: 33739617     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15557

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  6 in total

1.  A dynamic rhizosphere interplay between tree roots and soil bacteria under drought stress.

Authors:  Yaara Oppenheimer-Shaanan; Gilad Jakoby; Maya L Starr; Romiel Karliner; Gal Eilon; Maxim Itkin; Sergey Malitsky; Tamir Klein
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 8.713

2.  There Is No Carbon Transfer Between Scots Pine and Pine Mistletoe but the Assimilation Capacity of the Hemiparasite Is Constrained by Host Water Use Under Dry Conditions.

Authors:  Ao Wang; Marco M Lehmann; Andreas Rigling; Arthur Gessler; Matthias Saurer; Zhong Du; Mai-He Li
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-05-26       Impact factor: 6.627

3.  Drone-based physiological index reveals long-term acclimation and drought stress responses in trees.

Authors:  Petra D'Odorico; Leonie Schönbeck; Valentina Vitali; Katrin Meusburger; Marcus Schaub; Christian Ginzler; Roman Zweifel; Vera Marjorie Elauria Velasco; Jonas Gisler; Arthur Gessler; Ingo Ensminger
Journal:  Plant Cell Environ       Date:  2021-09-14       Impact factor: 7.947

4.  Soil fauna drives vertical redistribution of soil organic carbon in a long-term irrigated dry pine forest.

Authors:  Claudia Guidi; Beat Frey; Ivano Brunner; Katrin Meusburger; Michael E Vogel; Xiaomei Chen; Tobias Stucky; Dariusz J Gwiazdowicz; Piotr Skubała; Arun K Bose; Marcus Schaub; Andreas Rigling; Frank Hagedorn
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-02-21       Impact factor: 13.211

5.  Drought impacts on tree carbon sequestration and water use - evidence from intra-annual tree-ring characteristics.

Authors:  Elisabet Martínez-Sancho; Kerstin Treydte; Marco M Lehmann; Andreas Rigling; Patrick Fonti
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2022-06-21       Impact factor: 10.323

6.  Soil-plant interactions modulated water availability of Swiss forests during the 2015 and 2018 droughts.

Authors:  Katrin Meusburger; Volodymyr Trotsiuk; Paul Schmidt-Walter; Andri Baltensweiler; Philipp Brun; Fabian Bernhard; Mana Gharun; Raphael Habel; Frank Hagedorn; Roger Köchli; Achilleas Psomas; Heike Puhlmann; Anne Thimonier; Peter Waldner; Stephan Zimmermann; Lorenz Walthert
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-07-24       Impact factor: 13.211

  6 in total

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