Rhizospheric Processes Influencing the Biogeochemistry of Forest Ecosystems |
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Authors: | G.R. Gobran S. Clegg F. Courchesne |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Ecology and Environmental Research, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Box 7072, S-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden;(2) Département de Géographie, Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, Succursale Centre-Ville, Montréal, (Québec), H3C 3J7, Canada |
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Abstract: | In the rhizosphere, biotic and abiotic processes interact to create a zone distinct from the bulk soil that may strongly influence the biogeochemistry of forest ecosystems. This paper presents a conceptual model based upon three operationally defined soil-root compartments (bulk soil, rhizosphere and soil-root interface) to assess nutrient availability in the mineral soil-root system. The model is supported by chemical and mineralogical analyses from bulk and rhizosphere soils collected from a Norway spruce forest. The rhizosphere was more intensively weathered and had accumulated more acidity, base cations and phosphorus than the bulk soil. The quantity and quality of organic matter regulate the reciprocal relationships between soil and roots with their associated biota. However, the biogeochemical role of organic matter in the rhizosphere still remains as an area in which more future research is needed. The mechanisms that may regulate nutrient availability in the rhizosphere are also discussed and related to nutrient cycling and adaptation of forests growing under nutrient poor or perturbed conditions. We suggest that the rhizosphere is not an ephemeral environment in the soil, but persists over time and is resilient against perturbation as evinced by consistent differences between rhizosphere and bulk chemistry and mineralogy over wide range of field treatments. |
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Keywords: | acidity ecosystem perturbation fine roots forest soils modeling mycorrhizae nutrient acquisition rhizosphere soil sampling weathering |
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