Soil Hydrology, Georg-August Universität Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.
Ann Bot. 2013 Jul;112(2):277-90. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcs262. Epub 2012 Dec 12.
It is known that the soil near roots, the so-called rhizosphere, has physical and chemical properties different from those of the bulk soil. Rhizosphere properties are the result of several processes: root and soil shrinking/swelling during drying/wetting cycles, soil compaction by root growth, mucilage exuded by root caps, interaction of mucilage with soil particles, mucilage shrinking/swelling and mucilage biodegradation. These processes may lead to variable rhizosphere properties, i.e. the presence of air-filled gaps between soil and roots; water repellence in the rhizosphere caused by drying of mucilage around the soil particles; or water accumulation in the rhizosphere due to the high water-holding capacity of mucilage. The resulting properties are not constant in time but they change as a function of soil condition, root growth rate and mucilage age.
We consider such a variability as an expression of rhizosphere plasticity, which may be a strategy for plants to control which part of the root system will have a facilitated access to water and which roots will be disconnected from the soil, for instance by air-filled gaps or by rhizosphere hydrophobicity. To describe such a dualism, we suggest classifying rhizosphere into two categories: class A refers to a rhizosphere covered with hydrated mucilage that optimally connects roots to soil and facilitates water uptake from dry soils. Class B refers to the case of air-filled gaps and/or hydrophobic rhizosphere, which isolate roots from the soil and may limit water uptake from the soil as well water loss to the soil. The main function of roots covered by class B will be long-distance transport of water.
This concept has implications for soil and plant water relations at the plant scale. Root water uptake in dry conditions is expected to shift to regions covered with rhizosphere class A. On the other hand, hydraulic lift may be limited in regions covered with rhizosphere class B. New experimental methods need to be developed and applied to different plant species and soil types, in order to understand whether such dualism in rhizosphere properties is an important mechanism for efficient utilization of scarce resources and drought tolerance.
众所周知,根附近的土壤,即所谓的根际,具有与体相土壤不同的物理和化学性质。根际特性是几个过程的结果:根和土壤在干湿循环过程中的收缩/膨胀、根生长引起的土壤压实、根冠分泌的黏液、黏液与土壤颗粒的相互作用、黏液的收缩/膨胀和黏液的生物降解。这些过程可能导致可变的根际特性,即土壤和根之间存在充满空气的间隙;由于土壤颗粒周围的黏液干燥而导致根际的疏水性;或由于黏液的高持水能力而导致根际积水。由此产生的特性不是随时间而是随土壤条件、根生长速度和黏液年龄而变化。
我们将这种可变性视为根际可塑性的一种表现,这可能是植物控制根系的哪个部分将更容易获得水以及哪些根系将与土壤分离的一种策略,例如通过充满空气的间隙或根际疏水性。为了描述这种二元性,我们建议将根际分为两类:A 类指覆盖有水化黏液的根际,它能使根系与土壤最佳连接,并促进从干燥土壤中吸水。B 类指存在空气间隙和/或疏水性根际的情况,它将根系与土壤隔离,并可能限制从土壤中吸水以及向土壤中失水。B 类覆盖的根系的主要功能将是远距离运输水。
这一概念对植物尺度上的土壤和植物水分关系具有重要意义。在干燥条件下,根对水的吸收预计将转移到覆盖有 A 类根际的区域。另一方面,水力提升可能会在覆盖有 B 类根际的区域受到限制。需要开发和应用新的实验方法来研究不同的植物物种和土壤类型,以了解根际特性的这种二元性是否是有效利用稀缺资源和耐旱性的重要机制。