La Trobe

Co–elevation of CO2 and temperature enhances nitrogen mineralization in the rhizosphere of rice

journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-19, 03:26 authored by Jinyuan Zhang, Z Yu, Y Li, G Wang, X Liu, Caixian TangCaixian Tang, J Adams, J Liu, S Zhang, J Wu, Jian JinJian Jin
It is unclear how elevated CO2 (eCO2) and warming interactively influence soil N mineralization in the rhizosphere of rice (Oryza sativa L.), given that the N mineralization process in anaerobic paddy soils differs from that of aerobic upland soils. In this study, we conducted a rhizobox experiment in open top chambers and used 15N-13C dual-labeling to examine the impacts of eCO2 (700 ppm) and warming (2 °C above the ambient) on N mineralization and associated microbial processes in the rhizosphere of rice plants under anaerobic conditions. Compared to the control, the combination of eCO2 and warming increased rice N uptake by 50% in a no-added-N treatment and 32% under an N-added treatment, with the additional uptake mainly consisting of soil-derived N. Co-elevation of CO2 and temperature increased microbial biomass C and N and increased N mineralization by 41% and 23% in the no-added-N and N-added treatments, respectively. The absolute abundances of the N-mineralization genes chiA, pepA, pepN, and urea hydrolysis gene ureC in the rhizosphere increased by 22–30% under eCO2 and warming, corresponding to the additional N mineralization and photosynthetic C allocation into the soil. However, eCO2 plus warming did not increase the metabolic efficiency of N mineralization (mineralized N per unit microbial N). Our results suggest that the co-elevation of CO2 and temperature stimulated microbially mediated soil N mineralization in the rhizosphere of rice, posing a risk on the acceleration of soil organic matter decomposition.

Funding

The project was funded by the Key Program of Natural Science Foundation of Heilongjiang Province of China (ZD2021D001), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42177435), the Australian Research Council Project (DP210100775), and the Youth Innovation Promotion Association of Chinese Academy of Sciences (2019233).

History

Publication Date

2024-08-01

Journal

Biology and Fertility of Soils

Volume

60

Pagination

13p. (p. 729-741)

Publisher

Springer Nature

ISSN

0178-2762

Rights Statement

© The Authors 2022. This version of the article has been accepted for publication, after peer review and is subject to Springer Nature’s AM terms of use (https://www.springernature.com/gp/open-science/policies/accepted- manuscript-terms) but is not the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections. The Version of Record is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-022-01667-4 and https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00374-022-01667-4