학술논문

Drought resistance and resilience of rhizosphere communities in forest soils from the cellular to ecosystem scale – insights from 13C pulse labeling.
Document Type
Article
Source
New Phytologist. May2024, Vol. 242 Issue 3, p960-974. 15p.
Subject
*FOREST soils
*COMMUNITY forests
*RHIZOSPHERE
*DROUGHTS
*CROWNS (Botany)
*SOIL microbial ecology
*CORAL reefs & islands
Language
ISSN
0028-646X
Abstract
Summary: The link between above‐ and belowground communities is a key uncertainty in drought and rewetting effects on forest carbon (C) cycle.In young beech model ecosystems and mature naturally dry pine forest exposed to 15‐yr‐long irrigation, we performed 13C pulse labeling experiments, one during drought and one 2 wk after rewetting, tracing tree assimilates into rhizosphere communities.The 13C pulses applied in tree crowns reached soil microbial communities of the young and mature forests one and 4 d later, respectively. Drought decreased the transfer of labeled assimilates relative to the irrigation treatment. The 13C label in phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs) indicated greater drought reduction of assimilate incorporation by fungi (−85%) than by gram‐positive (−43%) and gram‐negative bacteria (−58%).13C label incorporation was more strongly reduced for PLFAs (cell membrane) than for microbial cytoplasm extracted by chloroform. This suggests that fresh rhizodeposits are predominantly used for osmoregulation or storage under drought, at the expense of new cell formation. Two weeks after rewetting, 13C enrichment in PLFAs was greater in previously dry than in continuously moist soils. Drought and rewetting effects were greater in beech systems than in pine forest.Belowground C allocation and rhizosphere communities are highly resilient to drought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]