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1.
Kerley  S. J.  Leach  J. E.  Swain  J. L.  Huyghe  C. 《Plant and Soil》2000,222(1-2):241-253
In calcareous soils, genotypes of Lupinus albus L. generally grow poorly, resulting in stunted plants that often develop lime-induced chlorosis. In contrast, some genotypes of L. pilosus Murr. occur naturally in calcareous soils without developing any visible symptoms of stress. Some genotypic variation for tolerance to calcareous soil does exist in L. albus and the tolerance mechanisms need to be determined. The adaptation through root system morphological plasticity of L. albus and L. pilosus, to heterogeneous limed soil profiles (pH 7.8) containing either patches of acid (non-limed) soil, or vertically split between acid and limed soil, was investigated. When grown in the presence of patches of acid soil, L. albus had a 52% greater shoot dry weight and visibly greener leaves compared with plants grown in the homogeneous limed soil. Total root dry matter in the acid-soil patches was greater than in the control limed-soil patches. This was due to a four-fold increase in the cluster root mass, accounting for 95% of the root dry matter in the acid-soil patch. Although these cluster roots secreted no more citric acid per unit mass than those in the limed soil did, their greater mass resulted in a higher citrate concentration in the surrounding soil. L. pilosus responded to the patches of acid soil in a manner comparable with L. albus. When grown in the homogeneous limed soil, L. pilosus had a greater maximum net CO2 assimilation rate (Pmax) than L. albus, however, the Pmax of both species increased after they had accessed a patch of acid soil. Differences were apparent between the L. albus genotypes grown in soil profiles split vertically into limed and acid soil. A genotype by soil interaction occurred in the partitioning between soils of the cluster roots. The genotype La 674 was comparable with L. pilosus and produced over 11% of its cluster roots in the limed soil, whereas the other genotypes produced only 1–3% of their cluster roots in the limed soil. These results indicate L. pilosus is better adapted to the limed soil than L. albus, but that both species respond to a heterogeneous soil by producing mainly cluster roots in an acid-soil patch. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

2.
Two wheat varieties with differing aluminium tolerance were grown in pots of acid soil. Liming did not change significantly the amounts of chemically extractable P and K, but caused improved vegetative growth, increased inflow of P and K and reduced uptake of Al. Without lime, roots had a higher content and concentration of P than shoots; liming reversed this. Without lime the sensitive variety with a shorter root length had an Al inflow ten times that of the tolerant one: tolerance involves a mechanism for exlcuding Al. The inflow of P per unit inflow of Al (mol ratio) without lime was three times greater for the tolerant variety which therefore has more P to counteract the effects of Al. The same varieties were grown in two-layer soil columns, with a low P status and a limed topsoil and acid subsoil. Liming the subsoil improved plant growth but this was still restricted by low P availability. Addition of P to the topsoil caused good growth regardless of subsoil acidity: root growth increased in both layers and P (labelled with32P) taken up from the topsoil was translocated to roots in the subsoil. This P inactivated root Al and allowed the roots to grow and take up more P from the acid subsoil with however a reduction in inflow. The sensitive variety was affected more by the acid subsoil and low P availability, had a similar ability to translocate P to subsoil roots but could not attain the growth rate of the tolerant wheat even with P and lime.  相似文献   

3.
White lupin (Lupinus albus L. cv. Amiga) reacts to phosphate deficiency by producing cluster roots which exude large amounts of organic acids. The detailed knowledge of the excretion physiology of the different root parts makes it a good model plant to study plant-bacteria interaction. Since the effect of the organic acid exudation by cluster roots on the rhizosphere microflora is still poorly understood, we investigated the abundance, diversity and functions of bacteria associated with the cluster roots of white lupin, with special emphasis on the influence of root proximity (comparing root, rhizosphere soil and bulk soil fractions) and cluster root growth stages, which are characterized by different excretion activities. Plants were grown for five weeks in microcosms, in the presence of low phosphate concentrations, on acidic sand inoculated with a soil suspension from a lupin field. Plate counts showed that bacterial abundance decreased at the stage where the cluster root excretes high amounts of citrate and protons. In vitro tests on isolates showed that the frequencies of auxin producers were highest in juvenile and mature cluster roots and significantly decreased in senescent cluster roots. However, no significant difference in the frequency of auxin producers was found between cluster and non cluster roots. The diversity and structure of bacterial communities were investigated by DGGE of 16S rDNA and 16S rRNA. The diversity and community structure were mostly influenced by root proximity and, to a lesser extent, by cluster root stage. The richness of bacterial communities decreased with root proximity, whereas the proportion of active populations increased. The high citrate and proton excretion occurring at the mature stage of cluster roots had a strong impact on the structure and richness of the bacterial communities, both in the root and in the rhizosphere soil.  相似文献   

4.
Water extraction from subsoil in upland rice (Oryza sativa L.) was examined as related to topsoil desiccation and subsoil compaction. The water extraction was observed by measurements of heavy water concentrations in transpiring plants. The plants were grown in pots that were filled with sandy soil and vertically compartmented into two columns. Heavy water was applied to the subsoil. Plants exposed to mild topsoil desiccation (–120 kPa in water potential) eventually increased water extraction from the subsoil and maintained photosynthetic rate and stomatal conductance at the wet condition level. The rates of the plants subjected to severely droughted topsoil (–190 kPa) were significantly lowered due to less water uptake from the subsoil. Subsoil compaction at bulk densities of 1.45 and 1.50 Mg m–3 inhibited increase of root length densities. Limited water extraction from the subsoil was insufficient to maintain plant productivity under drought conditions. Daily water uptake per unit of root length in the lower tube did not apparently increase even if water demand on the unit root length increased. When water to topsoil was completely withheld, water extraction from the subsoil gradually increased as the topsoil dried out. Plants that were watered and rewatered took up very little water from the subsoil. The extraction from the subsoil occurred only when water potential of the topsoil was below about –190 kPa.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Rooting into acid subsoils would be a desirable trait for alfalfa which should result in better water extraction and yield. In this study, the rooting depth into acid subsoils and top yield of alfalfa plants selected for acid tolerance were investigated in a repacked profile with a limed, fertile topsoil, but unamended, acid subsoil. The effects of subsoil modification by CaCO3 and CaSO4·2H2O addition on alfalfa rooting, top growth, and water extraction were also studied. Plants from acid selections rooted deeper into acid subsoil when compared to control plants (selected under limed conditions). However, the reverse response was found in the CaSO4·2H2O treated subsoil. There were no differences among selections for total top yield for any subsoil treatment. Water extraction from the lower subsoil and top growth yield (data pooled by selections) were improved mainly in the subsoil treatment containing the highest addition of CaCO3.  相似文献   

6.
Tang  C.  Diatloff  E.  Rengel  Z.  McGann  B. 《Plant and Soil》2001,236(1):1-10
Subsurface soil acidity coupled with high levels of toxic Al is a major limiting factor in wheat production in many areas of the world. This study examined the effect of subsurface soil acidity on the growth and yield of two near-isogenic wheat genotypes differing in Al tolerance at a single genetic locus in reconstructed soil columns. In one experiment, plants were grown in columns with limed topsoil and limed or acidic subsurface soils, and received water only to the subsurface soil at a late part of the growth period. While shoot dry weight, ear number and grain yield of Al-tolerant genotype (ET8) were not affected by subsurface soil acidity, liming subsurface soil increased shoot weight and grain yield of Al-sensitive genotype (ES8) by 60% and ear number by 32%. Similarly, root length density of ET8 was the same in the limed and acidic subsurface soils, while the root length density of ES8 in the acidic subsurface soil was only half of that in the limed subsurface soil. In another experiment, plants were grown with limed topsoil and acidic subsurface soil under two watering regimes. Both genotypes supplied with water throughout the soil column produced almost twice the dry weight of those receiving water only in the subsurface soil. The tolerant genotype ET8 had shoot biomass and grain yield one-third higher than ES8 when supplied with water throughout the whole column, and had yield 11% higher when receiving water in the subsurface soil only. The tolerant genotype ET8 produced more than five times the root length in the acidic subsurface soil compared to ES8. Irrespective of watering regime, the amount of water added to maintain field capacity of the soil was up to 2-fold higher under ET8 than under ES8. The results suggest that the genotypic variation in growth and yield of wheat grown with subsurface soil acidity results from the difference in root proliferation in the subsurface soil and hence in utilizing nutrient and water reserves in the subsurface soil layer.  相似文献   

7.
Velvet beans, fast growing leguminous cover crops used in the humid tropics, are shallow rooted on acid soils. This might be due to an inherent branching pattern, to an intrinsic toxicity of the acid subsoil or to a relative preference for root development in the topsoil. Such preference could be based on soil chemical factors in the subsoil or on physical factors such as penetration resistance or aeration. In a field experiment with two species of velvet bean (Mucuna pruriens var. utilis and M. deeringiana) all topsoil was removed and plants were sown directly into the acid subsoil. Root development was neither affected by this treatment nor by P fertilization or liming. In the absence of topsoil good root development in the exposed upper layer of subsoil was possible, so the hypothesis of a toxicity per se of the subsoil could be rejected. To test whether poor root development in the subsoil in the presence of topsoil is due to an inherent branching pattern of the plant or to a relative preference for topsoil, a modified in-growth core technique was used. Local topsoil and subsoil and an acid soil with a higher exchangeable Al content were placed in mesh bags at different depths and at different bulk densities, with and without lime and/or P fertilizer. A comparison of root development in mesh bags placed in the topsoil or subsoil showed that position and thus inherent branching pattern is not important. Root development in the subsoil was poor when this soil was placed in a mesh bag in the topsoil, but in an acid soil of much higher exchangeable Al content and higher percentage Al saturation more roots developed. In a second experiment in mesh bags, bulk density of the repacked soil in the range 1.0–1.5 g cm-3 had no significant effect on root development. P fertilization and a high rate of liming of the soil placed in the mesh bag had a positive effect on root length density. It is concluded that poor root development in the acid subsoil under field conditions is due to a relative preference for topsoil. Al saturation and bulk density of the soil are not directly involved in this preference, but differences in availability of P and Mg or in Ca/Al ratios might play a role.  相似文献   

8.
Plants growing in soils typically experience a mixture of loose and compact soil. The hypothesis that the proportion of a root system exposed to compact soil and/or the timing at which this exposure occurs determines shoot growth responses was tested. Broccoli (Brassica oleracea var. italica cv. Greenbelt) seedlings were grown in pot experiments with compact, loose and localized soil compaction created by either horizontal (compact subsoils 75 or 150 mm below loose topsoil) or vertical (adjacent compact and loose columns of soil) configurations of loose (1.2 Mg m(-3)) and compact (1.8 Mg m(-3)) soil. Entirely compact soil reduced leaf area by up to 54%, relative to loose soil. When compaction was localized, only the vertical columns of compact and loose soil reduced leaf area (by 30%). Neither the proportion of roots in compact soil nor the timing of exposure could explain the differing shoot growth responses to localized soil compaction. Instead, the strong relationship between total root length and leaf area (r(2)=0.92) indicated that localized soil compaction reduced shoot growth only when it suppressed total root length. This occurred when isolated root axes of the same plant were exposed to vertical columns of compact and loose soil. When a single root axis grew through loose soil into either a shallow or deep compact subsoil, compensatory root growth in the loose soil maintained total root length and thus shoot growth was unaffected. These contrasting root systems responses to localized soil compaction may explain the variable shoot growth responses observed under heterogeneous conditions.  相似文献   

9.
The importance of arbuscular mycorrhizae (AM) in plant and ecosystem responses to global changes, e.g. elevated atmospheric CO2, is widely acknowledged. Frequently, increases in AM root colonization occur in response to increased CO2, but also the lack of significant changes has been reported. The goal of this study was to test whether arbuscular mycorrhizae (root colonization and composition of root colonization) respond to plants grown in elevated CO2 as a function of soil depth. We grew Bromus hordeaceus L. and Lotus wrangelianus Fischer & C. Meyer monocultures in large pots with a synthetic serpentine soil profile for 4 yr in an experiment, in which CO2 concentration was crossed factorially with NPK fertilization. When analyzing root infection separately for topsoil (0–15 cm) and subsoil (15–45 cm), we found large (e.g., about 5-fold) increases of AM fungal root colonization in the subsoil in response to CO2, but no significant changes in the corresponding topsoil of Bromus. Only the coarse endophyte AM fungi, not the fine endophyte AM fungi, were responsible for the observed increase in the bottom soil layer, indicating a depth-dependent shift in the AM community colonizing the roots, even at this coarse morphological level. Other response variables also had significant soil layer * CO2 interaction terms. The subsoil response would have been hidden in an unstratified assessment of the total root system, since most of the root length was concentrated in the top soil layer. The increased presence of mycorrhizae in roots deeper in the soil should be considered in sampling protocols, as it may be indicative of changed patterns of nutrient acquisition and carbon sequestration.  相似文献   

10.
The formation of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae (VAM) in intact soil profiles from two sites in southeastern Australia were measured at two depths using a bioassay grown in intact soil cores. Intact soil cores were taken from (1) topsoil (0–15 cm) and (2) subsoil (15–30 cm) four times during 1990. Seeds of Acacialinifolia (Vent.) Willd. (Mimosaceae) were sown into the cores and plants harvested 8 and 12 weeks after sowing. For 1990, at both sites and in all seasons, VAM most readily developed in the roots of seedlings of A. linifolia grown in topsoil. Limited VAM occurred in roots grown in subsoil cores. Most colonisation of roots by VAM occurred from cores collected during spring and summer. Spore numbers were quantified for each site and depth by wet-sieving 100-g samples of air-dried soil and counting turgid spores containing oil droplets. Three types of spores were found in the soils. Few spores were extracted from all soils sampled, and for the most abundant of the spore types at least twice as many spores occurred in the topsoil than in the subsoil for all seasons examined. As most of the propagules that initiate VAM infection were observed in the topsoil, disturbances which involve the removal and storage of the top 15 cm will adversely affected these fungi.  相似文献   

11.
Many plants are adapted to an eroded landscape with a large proportion of virgin soil. Open and disturbed soils are today almost only restricted to agricultural fields with high loads of fertilizers. We conducted a pot experiment in order to investigate growth and nutritional constraints of one calcicole species, Anisantha (syn. Bromus) tectorum, and one calcifuge species, Rumex acetosella, in decalcified topsoil and recently exposed calcareous subsoil from a field experiment in sandy grassland. In the pot experiment we implemented one treatment where we limed topsoil with CaCO3 to the same amount as in subsoil.The subsoil had approximately 10% CaCO3 and both species grew less in this soil compared to the topsoil, which had less than 1% CaCO3. Germination rate of A. tectorum was higher in subsoil than in topsoil or limed topsoil. P fertilization of the limed topsoil counteracted the negative liming effect for A. tectorum, but only partly so for R. acetosella. P fertilization of subsoil increased the shoot biomass of A. tectorum, but not of R. acetosella. P concentration in plants was not reduced when growing on subsoil or limed topsoil compared to topsoil. The results show that lime addition may reduce the P availability also to calcicole species such as A. tectorum and we found indications for that Ca toxicity may be a causing factor for the calcifuge behavior of R. acetosella. The significance of the results for conservation management practices in sandy grasslands is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
S. Bonachela 《Plant and Soil》1996,183(2):239-251
Root systems of one triticale (× triticosecale Witt.) and one barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) cultivar grown for grain or for the dual purpose of winter forage-plus-grain were studied in a Mediterranean climate (Granada, Spain). The aim was to assess the effect of winter forage removal on root systems and to improve the knowledge of cereal root systems under Mediterranean conditions in relation to soil water use. After the forage was removed by clipping at the end of the winter period, cereal roots were shallower and lower in length densities, compared to the unclipped treatment. The largest differences occurred during the clipping-anthesis period and in the upper soil layers. At the end of the life cycle, the differences between the two systems regarding depth, density and dry matter of roots were small or nil. Moreover, there were no differences in total water use between clipped and unclipped cereals.Under both production systems (grain and forage plus grain), cereals demonstrated variable downward root extension (0.9 to 1.8 m) as a response to the wetting depth. Triticale roots continued growing after anthesis, especially in the deeper soil layers. In spite of that, root systems were not able to extract a notable amount of residual water (25 to 50 mm) apparently available from the subsoil. In semi-arid Mediterranean drylands, cereal root systems with greater phenotypic plasticity (deeper or larger in the subsoil) in response to subsoil water should be of interest in wetter areas or seasons. This does not necessarily imply a larger root system, but rather a root growth pattern with greater root growth in the subsoil.  相似文献   

13.
Tang  C.  Buirchell  B. J.  Longnecker  N. E.  Robson  A. D. 《Plant and Soil》1993,155(1):513-516
Commercial lupins grow poorly on alkaline and neutral fine-textured soils. Genotypic variation exists among lupins. The present study compared the growth of 13 lupin genotypes, including introduced cultivars and wild types, in an alkaline loamy soil and an acid loamy soil.Plants grown in the alkaline and acid soils did not show obvious symptoms of iron deficiency at any stage. There was however a large variation of shoot fresh weight among genotypes in response to the alkaline soil with L. atlanticus and L. pilosus being more tolerant than L. luteus, L. cosentinii, L. albus and L. angustifolius. Some variation also existed among genotypes of L. angustifolius. In addition, root growth was retarded on the alkaline soil except for L. atlanticus, L. pilosus P20955 and L. albus Kiev mutant. In the alkaline soil, root growth at week 2 correlated well with the shoot fresh weight at week 12. The results suggest that early root elongation may be useful for screening tolerant genotypes for alkaline soils.  相似文献   

14.
A pot experiment was carried out with pearl millet (Pennisetum americanum [L.] Leeke) growing in a sandy soil in which the upper (topsoil) and lower (subsoil) parts of the pots were separated by a perlite layer to prevent capillary water movement. Using microtensiometers a study was made to establish whether it was possible to measure hydraulic lift by which the upper part of the soil was rewetted when water was supplied exclusively to the lower part of the soil.Hydraulic lift occurred during the first seven days of the period of measurement, with a maximum water release to the soil of 2.7 Vol. % during one night (equivalent to 10.8 mL water in the top 10 cm of the soil profile). This magnitude was obtained at very high root length densities, so that water release from the roots would be expected to be much smaller under field conditions.Hydraulic lift ceased when the soil matric potential in the topsoil dropped below-10 kPa at the end of the light period and could not be re-established, neither by extending the dark period, nor after rewatering the topsoil. The disappearance of hydraulic lift could be explained in part through osmotic adaptation of plant roots and, thus prevention of water release from the roots in the topsoil. It is concluded that hydraulic lift may affect nutrient uptake from drying topsoil by extending the time period favourable for uptake from the topsoil.  相似文献   

15.
Peek  C. S.  Robson  A. D.  Kuo  J. 《Plant and Soil》2003,248(1-2):237-246
The effect of phosphorus supply on the formation, morphology and anatomy of cluster roots of Lupinus albus L. cv Ultra grown in a loam and two sandy soils was examined relative to its effect on total root length, shoot weight and the phosphorus concentration of the shoots. The loam soil was most conducive to the formation of cluster roots. Cluster roots growing in the sandy soils developed to a lesser extent on plants of an equivalent phosphorus status, suggesting that some biotic or abiotic factors independent of phosphorus supply were also operating. The presence of mature cluster rootlets on a length of lateral root increased the root surface area by 14–22 times of an equal length of lateral roots not bearing cluster rootlets. The application of phosphorus decreased cluster-root length, whereas total root length showed a steady increase. There was an inverse relationship between cluster-root production and phosphorus concentration in shoots ranging from 2 to 8.5 mg g–1 with the critical phosphorus level for maximum shoot growth being around 2.5 mg g–1. Cluster roots formed in solution culture were not well developed in comparison with those grown in the loam soil or nutrient solution with added loam soil. The organisation of the cluster rootlet was similar to that of the lateral roots. Mature rootlets lacked an apical meristem and a vascular cambium with a reduced root cap and cortical tissue.  相似文献   

16.
Barley ( Hordeum vulgare L.), genetically modified with the Al3+ resistance gene of wheat ( TaALMT1 ), was compared with a non-transformed sibling line when grown on an acidic and highly phosphate-fixing ferrosol supplied with a range of phosphorus concentrations. In short-term pot trials (26 days), transgenic barley expressing TaALMT1 (GP-ALMT1) was more efficient than a non-transformed sibling line (GP) at taking up phosphorus on acid soil, but the genotypes did not differ when the soil was limed. Differences in phosphorus uptake efficiency on acid soil could be attributed not only to the differential effects of aluminium toxicity on root growth between the genotypes, but also to differences in phosphorus uptake per unit root length. Although GP-ALMT1 out-performed GP on acid soil, it was still not as efficient at taking up phosphorus as plants grown on limed soil. GP-ALMT1 plants grown in acid soil possessed substantially smaller rhizosheaths than those grown in limed soil, suggesting that root hairs were shorter. This is a probable reason for the lower phosphorus uptake efficiency. When grown to maturity in large pots, GP-ALMT1 plants produced more than twice the grain as GP plants grown on acid soil and 80% of the grain produced by limed controls. Expression of TaALMT1 in barley was not associated with a penalty in either total shoot or grain production in the absence of Al3+, with both genotypes showing equivalent yields in limed soil. These findings demonstrate that an important crop species can be genetically engineered to successfully increase grain production on an acid soil.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated in situ the temporal patterns and spatial extent of organic acid anion exudation into the rhizosphere solution of Lupinus albus, and its relation with the nutrient anions phosphate, nitrate and sulfate by means of a rhizobox micro suction cup method under P sufficient conditions. We compared the soil solution in the rhizosphere of cluster roots with that in the vicinity of normal roots, nodules and bulk soil. Compared to the other rhizosphere and soil compartments, concentrations of organic acid anions were higher in the vicinity of cluster roots during the exudative burst (citrate, oxalate) and nodules (acetate, malate), while concentrations of inorganic nutrient anions were highest in the bulk soil. Both active cluster roots and nodules were most efficient in taking up nitrate and phosphate. The intensity of citrate exudation by cluster roots was highly variable. The overall temporal patterns during the lifetime of cluster roots were overlaid by a diurnal pattern, i.e. in most cases, the exudation burst consisted of one or more peaks occurring in the afternoon. Multiple exudation peaks occurred daily or were separated by 1 or 2 days. Although citrate concentrations decreased with distance from the cluster root apex, they were still significantly higher at a distance of 6 to 10 mm than in the bulk soil. Phosphate concentrations were extremely variable in the proximity of cluster roots. While our results indicate that under P sufficient conditions cluster roots take up phosphate during their entire life time, the influence of citrate exudation on phosphate mobilization from soil could not be assessed conclusively because of the complex interactions between P uptake, organic acid anion exudation and P mobilization. However, we observed indications of P mobilization concurrent with the highest measured citrate concentrations. In conclusion, this study provides semiquantitative in situ data on the reactivity of different root segments of L. albus L. in terms of root exudation and nutrient uptake under nutrient sufficient conditions, in particular on the temporal variability during the lifetime of cluster roots.  相似文献   

18.
Water regime of metal-contaminated soil under juvenile forest vegetation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In a three-year factorial lysimeter study in Open Top Chambers (OTCs), we investigated the effect of topsoil pollution by the heavy metals Zn, Cu, and Cd on the water regime of newly established forest ecosystems. Furthermore, we studied the influence of two types of uncontaminated subsoils (acidic vs. calcareous) and two types of irrigation water acidity (ambient rainfall chemistry vs. acidified chemistry) on the response of the vegetation. Each of the eight treatment combinations was replicated four times. The contamination (2700 mg kg–1 Zn, 385 mg kg–1 Cu and 10 mg kg–1 Cd) was applied by mixing filter dust from a non-ferrous metal smelter into the upper 15 cm of the soil profile, consisting of silty loam (pH 6.5). The same vegetation was established in all 32 lysimeters. The model forest ecosystem consisted of seedlings of Norway spruce (Picea abies), willow (Salix viminalis), poplar (Populus tremula) and birch (Betula pendula) trees and a variety of herbaceous understorey plants. Systematic and significant effects showed up in the second and third growing season after canopies had closed. Evapotranspiration was reduced in metal contaminated treatments, independent of the subsoil type and acidity of the irrigation water. This effect corresponded to an even stronger reduction in root growth in the metal treatments. In the first two growing seasons, evapotranspiration was higher on the calcareous than on the acidic subsoil. In the third year the difference disappeared. Acidification of the irrigation water had no significant effect on water consumption, although a tendency to enhance evapotranspiration became increasingly manifest in the second and third year. Soil water potentials indicated that the increasing water consumption over the years was fed primarily by intensified extraction of water from the topsoil in the lysimeters with acidic subsoil, whereas also lower depths became strongly exploited in the lysimeters with calcareous subsoil. These patterns agreed well with the vertical profiles of fine root density related with the two types of subsoil. Leaf transpiration measurements and biomass samples showed that different plant species in part responded quite differently and occasionally even in opposite ways to the metal treatments and subsoil conditions. They suggest that the year-to-year changes in treatment effects on water consumption and extraction patterns were related to differences in growth dynamics, as well as to shifts in competitiveness of the various species. Results showed that the uncontaminated subsoil offered a possibility to compensate the reduction in root water extraction in the topsoil under drought, as well as metal stress.  相似文献   

19.
Schuurman  J. J. 《Plant and Soil》1965,22(3):352-374
Summary Combinations of three grades of density of topsoil and of subsoil in artificial profiles have been used to study the influence of soil density on growth of the roots of oats. The soil was humous sand.The development of roots proved better the less compact the soil is. In the very dense soil rootgrowth was markedly reduced. It is likely that mechanical resistance is the only reason for the restriction of the growth hereby.Whereas a moderate growth of roots was possible even in the most densely packed soil, such a dense subsoil could absolutely not been penetrated by roots coming from a loose topsoil. This is presumably not due to a lack of support in the loose soil, but to an insufficient osmotic pressure in the roots.The hampered rootgrowth in compacted soil limited the uptake of water and nutrients and hereby reduced the development of the tops of plants.  相似文献   

20.
Previous laboratory experiments showed that velvet bean Mucuna pruriens is moderately tolerant to the presence of Al (up to 185 µM) in the root environment, but that it only develops a shallow root system in acid soils. Field experiments showed that Mucuna can tolerate acid subsoil conditions in a homogeneous root environment, but avoids subsoil if topsoil is present. Subsequent split-root experiments with a recirculating nutrient solution showed that this subsoil avoidance may be based on an Al avoidance mechanism in the root system. This Al avoidance mechanism, however, was not evident when phosphorus (P) supply to the whole plant was adequate. We thus hypothesized that surface application of P may help to overcome Al avoidance in the subsoil.In a field experiment on an ultisol in Lampung (Indonesia), only a moderate increase in aboveground biomass production was found for a wide range of P application rates, although the soil was low in available P, and the P adsorption isotherm was very steep. An increased P status of the topsoil and an increased P concentration in the aboveground biomass (from 50 to 75 mmol kg-1) had no effect on root development in the subsoil.  相似文献   

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