Abstract
Abstract
Background and aims
Paddy management results in frequent redox cycles of the soil and thus changes in the terrestrial iron (Fe) cycle. We intended to test that the increasing duration of paddy management and the increasing frequency of soil redox cycles leave their fingerprint on Fe isotope composition of paddy systems, which could subsequently be used to deduce the origin of rice plants as related to the extent of past soil paddy management.
Methods
We sampled soil and rice plants of a paddy chronosequence in China with rice cultivation history up to 2000 years and determined the changes of soil Fe pools and Fe isotope composition of the soil and rice plants.
Results
Prolonged paddy management reduced Fe concentrations in submerged topsoil leading to an enrichment of heavy Fe isotopes, with the δ56Fe values 0.12‰ heavier than the parent material after 2000 years. Particularly, Fe oxides were lost quickly, while exchangeable and organic-associated Fe continuously accumulated during paddy management and played an increasing role in the plant-available Fe pool in the topsoil. The Fe content in rice also increased with paddy age, while its Fe isotope composition did not reflect that of paddy soil but resembled that of the Fe plaques on the roots.
Conclusion
Prolonged rice cropping altered the biological contribution in the terrestrial Fe cycle. However, while soil Fe pools that are closely linked with biological activities were affected rather quickly, the changes in the whole soil Fe system were detectable only after a millennium of paddy management.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Plant Science,Soil Science
Cited by
2 articles.
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