Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5759852 | Food Webs | 2016 | 36 Pages |
Abstract
Agroecosystems occupy large areas of the land surface and arable soil food webs are of significant importance for global cycling of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N). In a field experiment we labeled maize plants (Zea mays L.) in 13CO2 atmosphere and by K15NO3 fertilization. During 25Â days, the incorporation of 13C and 15N was traced in plant compartments, soil and soil arthropods, as well as 13C in microbial phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs) and nematodes. Highlighting the importance of root-derived resources in agroecosystems, 13C was incorporated into all food web compartments, including microorganisms (PLFAs), nematodes and arthropods. The amount of incorporated 13C (as compared to unlabeled samples) markedly decreased along the food chain with â13C decreasing from 500â° in plant roots and 900â° in microbial PLFAs, to less than 40â° in nematodes and arthropods. Incorporation of 13C into fungal PLFAs considerably exceeded that into bacterial PLFAs, highlighting the importance of soil fungi as compared to bacteria in C cycling. Fertilizer-derived 15N uniformly increased with time in plant compartments and soil arthropods, indicating that N is distributed homogeneously in the soil food web. High channeling of both root-derived 13C and fertilizer-derived 15N to higher trophic levels by fungi, and intensive feeding on fungi by soil animals highlight the central role of saprotrophic fungi in C and nutrient fluxes in soil food webs of arable ecosystems.
Related Topics
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Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences (General)
Authors
Nicole Scheunemann, Johanna Pausch, Christoph Digel, Susanne Kramer, Anika Scharroba, Yakov Kuzyakov, Ellen Kandeler, Liliane Ruess, Olaf Butenschoen, Stefan Scheu,