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Decomposer biomass in the rhizosphere to assess rhizodeposition
Author(s) -
Christensen Søren,
Bjørnlund Lisa,
Vestergård Mette
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
oikos
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.672
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1600-0706
pISSN - 0030-1299
DOI - 10.1111/j.2006.0030-1299.15178.x
Subject(s) - rhizosphere , decomposer , biomass (ecology) , bacterivore , agronomy , biology , bacteria , botany , ecosystem , ecology , genetics
Quantification of the organic carbon released from plant roots is a challenge. These compounds of rhizodeposition are quickly transformed into CO 2 and eventually bacterial biomass to be consumed by bacterivores (protozoa and nematodes). Microbes stimulate rhizodeposition several‐fold so assays under sterile conditions give an unrealistic value. Quantifying bacterial production from 3 H‐thymidine incorporation falls short in the rhizosphere and the use of isotopes does not allow clear distinction between labeled CO 2 released from roots or microbes. We reduced rhizodeposition in 3–5 week old barley with a 2 week leaf aphid attack and found that biomass of bacterivores but not bacteria in the rhizosphere correlated with plant–induced respiration activity belowground. This indicated top‐down control of the bacteria. Moreover, at increasing density of aphids, bacterivore biomass in the rhizosphere decreased to the level in soil unaffected by roots. This suggests that difference in bacterivore biomass directly reflects variations in rhizodeposition. Rhizodeposition is estimated from plant‐induced increases in bacterial and bacterivore biomass, and yield factors, maintenance requirements, and turnover rates from the literature. We use literature values that maximize requirements for organic carbon and still estimate the total organic rhizodeposition to be as little as 4–6% of the plant‐induced respiration belowground.