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Get Free AccessGreater plant diversity is known to facilitate soil C gains, yet the exact mechanisms of this effect are still under intensive discussion. Whether a plant grows in monoculture or in a multi-species mixture can affect allocation of plant assimilates, belowground exudation, and microbial stimulation. The goal of this study was to examine the effects of inter-cropping on a previously overlooked aspect of plant-soil interactions, namely, on locations where plant assimilated C is allocated within the soil pore system and its subsequent fate in relation to soil pore size distributions. The soil for the study originated from a greenhouse experiment with switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) (var. Cave'n'Rock) (SW), big bluestem (Andropogon gerardii Vitman) (BB), and wild bergamot (Monarda fistulosa L.) (WB) grown in monocultures and in inter-cropped pairs and subjected to species specific 13C pulse labeling (Kravchenko et al., 2021). Intact soil cores (8 mm Ø) were collected from the experimental pots, subjected to a short-term (10 day) incubation, X-ray computed micro-tomography (µCT) scanning, and soil 13C micro-sampling “geo-referenced” to µCT images. Results indicated that in the plant systems with demonstrated interplant C transfer soil 13C was positively correlated with < 10 µm Ø pores immediately after plant termination and with 20–80 µm Ø pores after the incubation. In the systems without marked interplant C transfer soil, 13C was positively correlated with 20–30 µm Ø pores, however, the correlations disappeared after the incubation. Soils from the systems with demonstrated belowground C transfer displayed lower losses of root-derived C during incubation than the systems where interplant C transfer was negligible. Factors facilitating interplant C transfer appear to also lead to placement of root-derived C into smaller pores and to its greater protection there.
Hongbing Zheng, Andrey Guber, Yakov Kuzyakov, W. Zhang, Alexandra Kravchenko (2021). Plant species and plant neighbor identity affect associations between plant assimilated C inputs and soil pores. Geoderma, 407, pp. 115565-115565, DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2021.115565.
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Type
Article
Year
2021
Authors
5
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Geoderma
DOI
10.1016/j.geoderma.2021.115565
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