4.5 Article

Stem labeling results in different patterns of 14C rhizorespiration and 15N distribution in plants compared to natural assimilation pathways

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION AND SOIL SCIENCE
Volume 174, Issue 5, Pages 732-741

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/jpln.201000206

Keywords

C-14; belowground carbon; belowground nitrogen; double-labeling technique; N-15; pulse labeling; stem-feeding method

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To investigate C and N rhizodeposition, plants can be C-13-N-15 double-labeled with glucose and urea using a stem-feeding method (wick method). However, it is unclear how the C-13 applied as glucose is released into the soil as rhizorespiration in comparison with the C-13 applied as CO2 using a natural uptake pathway. In the present study, we therefore compared the short-term fate of C-14 and N-15 in white lupine and pea plants applied either by the wick method or the natural pathways of C and N assimilation. Plants were pulse-labeled in (CO2)-C-14-enriched atmosphere and N-15 urea was applied to the roots (atmosphere-soil) following the natural assimilation pathways, or plants were simultaneously labeled with C-14 and N-15 by applying a C-14 glucose-N-15 urea solution into the stem using the wick method. Plant development, soil microbial biomass, total rhizorespiration, and distribution of N in plants were not affected by the labeling method used but by plant species. However, the N-15 : N ratio in plant parts was significantly (p < 0.05) affected by the labeling method, indicating more homogeneous N-15 enrichment of plants labeled via root uptake. After (CO2)-C-14 atmosphere labeling of plants, the cumulated (CO2)-C-14 release from roots and soil showed the common saturation dynamics. In contrast, after C-14-glucose labeling by the wick method, the cumulated (CO2)-C-14 release increased linearly. These results show that C-14 applied as glucose using the wick method is not rapidly transferred to the roots as compared to a short-term (CO2)-C-14 pulse. This is partly due to a slower C-14 uptake and partly due to slow distribution within the plant. Consequently, C-14-glucose application by the wick method is no pulse-labeling approach. However, the advantages of the wick method for C-13-N-15 double labeling for estimating rhizodeposition especially under field conditions requires further methodological research.

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