Species of fast bulk‐soil nutrient cycling have lower rhizosphere effects: A nutrient spectrum of rhizosphere effects

Author:

Sun Lijuan12ORCID,Tsujii Yuki345ORCID,Xu Tianle16,Han Mengguang1,Li Rui1,Han Yunfeng1,Gan Dayong1,Zhu Biao1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Ecology, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, and Key Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes of the Ministry of Education Peking University Beijing China

2. State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro‐ecosystems, and College of Pastoral Agricultural Science and Technology Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

3. School of Natural Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. Faculty of Science Kyushu University Fukuoka Japan

5. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Richmond New South Wales Australia

6. Center for Agricultural Resources Research, Institute of Genetic and Developmental Biology Chinese Academy of Sciences Shijiazhuang China

Abstract

AbstractTree roots not only acquire readily‐usable soil nutrients but also affect microbial decomposition and manipulate nutrient availability in their surrounding soils, that is, rhizosphere effects (REs). Thus, REs challenge the basic understanding of how plants adapt to the environment and co‐exist with other species. Yet, how REs vary among species in response to species‐specific bulk soil nutrient cycling is not well‐known. Here, we studied how plant‐controlled microbial decomposition activities in rhizosphere soils respond to those in their corresponding bulk soils and whether these relations depend on species‐specific nutrient cycling in the bulk soils. We targeted 55 woody species of different clades and mycorrhizal types in three contrasting biomes, namely a temperate forest, a subtropical forest, and a tropical forest. We found that microbial decomposition activities in rhizosphere soils responded linearly to those in their corresponding bulk soils at the species level. Thereafter, we found that REs (parameters in rhizosphere soils minus those in corresponding bulk soils) of microbial decomposition activities had negative linear correlations with microbial decomposition activities in corresponding bulk soils. A multiple factor analysis revealed that soil organic carbon, total nitrogen, and soil water content favored bulk soil decomposition activities in all three biomes, showing that the magnitude of REs varied along a fast‐slow nutrient cycling spectrum in bulk soils. The species of fast nutrient cycling in their bulk soils tended to have smaller or even negative REs. Therefore, woody plants commonly utilize both positive and negative REs as a nutrient‐acquisition strategy. Based on the trade‐offs between REs and other nutrient‐acquisition strategies, we proposed a push and pull conceptual model which can bring plant nutrient‐acquisition cost and plant carbon economics spectrum together in the future. This model will facilitate not only the carbon and nutrient cycling but also the mechanisms of species co‐existence in forest ecosystems.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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