Abstract
Abstract. Better understanding and quantifying the relative influence of
plants, associated mycorrhizal fungi, and abiotic factors such as elevated
CO2 on biotic weathering is essential to constraining weathering
estimates. We employed a column microcosm system to examine the effects of
elevated CO2 and Pinus sylvestris seedlings, with or without the ectomycorrhizal fungi
Piloderma fallax and Suillus variegatus, on rhizosphere soil solution concentrations of low-molecular-weight
organic acids (LMWOAs) and on the weathering of primary minerals. Seedlings
significantly increased mineral weathering, as estimated from elemental
budgets of Ca, K, Mg, and Si. Elevated CO2 increased plant growth and
LMWOA concentrations but had no effect on weathering. Colonization by
ectomycorrhizal fungi, particularly P. fallax, showed some tendency to increase
weathering. LMWOA concentrations correlated with seedling biomass across both
CO2 and mycorrhizal treatments but not with total weathering. We
conclude that nutrient uptake, which reduces transport limitation to
weathering, is the primary mechanism by which plants enhanced weathering in
this system. While the experimental system used departs from conditions in
forest soils in a number of ways, these results are in line with weathering
studies performed at the ecosystem, macrocosm, and microcosm scale,
indicating that nutrient uptake by plants and microbes is an important
biological mechanism by which mineral weathering is enhanced.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献