Abstract

In many wetland plants, belowground transport of O2 via aerenchyma tissue and subsequent O2 loss across root surfaces generates small oxic root zones at depth in the rhizosphere with important consequences for carbon and nutrient cycling. This study demonstrates how roots of the intertidal salt-marsh plant Spartina anglica affect not only O2, but also pH and CO2 dynamics, resulting in distinct gradients of O2, pH, and CO2 in the rhizosphere. A novel planar optode system (VisiSens TD®, PreSens GmbH) was used for taking high-resolution 2D-images of the O2, pH, and CO2 distribution around roots during alternating light–dark cycles. Belowground sediment oxygenation was detected in the immediate vicinity of the roots, resulting in oxic root zones with a 1.7 mm radius from the root surface. CO2 accumulated around the roots, reaching a concentration up to threefold higher than the background concentration, and generally affected a larger area within a radius of 12.6 mm from the root surface. This contributed to a lowering of pH by 0.6 units around the roots. The O2, pH, and CO2 distribution was recorded on the same individual roots over diurnal light cycles in order to investigate the interlinkage between sediment oxygenation and CO2 and pH patterns. In the rhizosphere, oxic root zones showed higher oxygen concentrations during illumination of the aboveground biomass. In darkness, intraspecific differences were observed, where some plants maintained oxic root zones in darkness, while others did not. However, the temporal variation in sediment oxygenation was not reflected in the temporal variations of pH and CO2 around the roots, which were unaffected by changing light conditions at all times. This demonstrates that plant-mediated sediment oxygenation fueling microbial decomposition and chemical oxidation has limited impact on the dynamics of pH and CO2 in S. anglica rhizospheres, which may in turn be controlled by other processes such as root respiration and root exudation.

Highlights

  • Understanding the dynamics of O2, pH, and CO2 in rhizospheres is crucial for understanding important ecosystem functions, as these parameters are key drivers of biogeochemical processes involved in carbon and nutrient cycling (Hinsinger et al, 2009)

  • To evaluate how common marsh grasses control the abiotic environment in their rhizospheres, this study investigates the spatiotemporal dynamics of O2, pH, and CO2 in rhizospheres of S. anglica

  • The oxic root zones had a radius of 1.66 ± 1.14 (SD) mm measured from the root surface to the anoxic bulk sediment, when measured at the widest part

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Understanding the dynamics of O2, pH, and CO2 in rhizospheres is crucial for understanding important ecosystem functions, as these parameters are key drivers of biogeochemical processes involved in carbon and nutrient cycling (Hinsinger et al, 2009). Plant-mediated sediment oxygenation and rhizosphere acidification are key mechanisms by which wetland plants improve nutrient availability and uptake (Bradley and Morris, 1990; Lai et al, 2012) and weaken the impact of reduced phytotoxins, such as H2S, Fe(II), and Mn(II) (Rozema et al, 1985; Lee, 1999; Pezeshki, 2001). In this way, the interaction between roots and their abiotic environment affects key eco-physiological processes controlling primary production in wetlands (Mendelssohn and Morris, 2002). Ammonium uptake on the other hand is highly affected by sediment oxygenation (Bradley and Morris, 1991)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.