Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kitashirakawa Oiwake Cho, Sakyo District, Kyoto 6068502, Japan.
Institute of Ecology, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, and Key Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes of the Ministry of Education, Peking University, 5 Yiheyuan Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100871, China.
Tree Physiol. 2020 Mar 11;40(3):367-376. doi: 10.1093/treephys/tpz143.
In forest ecosystems, fine root respiration directly contributes to belowground carbon (C) cycling. Exudation from fine roots indirectly affects C cycling via enhanced microbial decomposition of soil organic matter. Although these root-derived C fluxes are essential components of belowground C cycling, how nitrogen (N) addition affects these fluxes and their correlations remains unclear. In this study, fine root exudation, respiration and chemical/morphological traits were measured in a dominant canopy species, Quercus crispula Blume, found in a cool temperate forest, the Tomakomai Experimental Forest, Hokkaido University, which has undergone 5-year N addition. Soil-dissolved organic carbon (DOC) was also measured in both bulk and rhizosphere soils to evaluate the impact of fine root exudation on soil C cycling. Compared with a control plot with no N treatment, fine roots in the N addition plot exhibited larger diameters and higher N concentrations, but lower specific root lengths and areas. On a root-weight basis, respiration was not different between plots, but exudation was slightly higher under N addition. On a root-area basis, exudation was significantly higher in the N addition plot. Additionally, differences in DOC between rhizosphere and bulk soils were two times higher in the N addition plot than the control plot. Although fine root respiration was positively correlated with exudation in both the control and N addition plots, the ratio of exudation C to respiration C decreased after 5-year N addition. Nitrogen addition also affected absolute C allocation to fine root exudation and changed the C allocation strategy between exudation and respiration fluxes. These findings will help enhance predictions of belowground C allocation and C cycling under N-rich conditions in the future.
在森林生态系统中,细根呼吸直接促进了地下碳(C)循环。细根的分泌物通过增强土壤有机质的微生物分解,间接地影响碳循环。尽管这些根源 C 通量是地下碳循环的重要组成部分,但氮(N)添加如何影响这些通量及其相关性尚不清楚。本研究在北海道大学富良野实验林,对一种优势林冠物种栓皮栎(Quercus crispula Blume)的细根分泌物、呼吸和化学/形态特征进行了测量,该林分已经进行了 5 年的 N 添加。还测量了土壤溶解有机碳(DOC)在非根际和根际土壤中的含量,以评估细根分泌物对土壤 C 循环的影响。与没有 N 处理的对照样地相比,N 添加样地的细根直径较大,N 浓度较高,但比根长和比根面积较小。按根重计算,两处理样地间的呼吸没有差异,但 N 添加样地的分泌物略高。按根面积计算,N 添加样地的分泌物显著较高。此外,N 添加样地的根际和非根际土壤之间的 DOC 差异是对照样地的两倍。尽管在对照和 N 添加样地,细根呼吸与分泌物均呈正相关,但在 5 年 N 添加后,分泌物 C 与呼吸 C 的比值降低。N 添加还影响了细根分泌物的绝对 C 分配,并改变了分泌物和呼吸通量之间的 C 分配策略。这些发现将有助于提高未来富氮条件下地下 C 分配和 C 循环的预测能力。