The soil organic carbon stabilization potential of old and new wheat cultivars: a <sup>13</sup>CO<sub>2</sub>-labeling study
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Published:2020-06-11
Issue:11
Volume:17
Page:2971-2986
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Van de Broek MarijnORCID, Ghiasi Shiva, Decock Charlotte, Hund AndreasORCID, Abiven SamuelORCID, Friedli Cordula, Werner Roland A.ORCID, Six Johan
Abstract
Abstract. Over the past decades, average global wheat yields have
increased by about 250 %, mainly due to the cultivation of high-yielding
wheat cultivars. This selection process not only affected aboveground parts
of plants, but in some cases also reduced root biomass, with potentially
large consequences for the amount of organic carbon (OC) transferred to the
soil. To study the effect of wheat breeding for high-yielding cultivars on
subsoil OC dynamics, two old and two new wheat cultivars from the Swiss
wheat breeding program were grown for one growing season in 1.5 m deep
lysimeters and pulse labeled with 13CO2 to quantify the amount
of assimilated carbon that was transferred belowground and can potentially
be stabilized in the soil. The results show that although the old wheat
cultivars with higher root biomass transferred more assimilated carbon
belowground compared to more recent cultivars, no significant differences in
net rhizodeposition were found between the different cultivars. As a
consequence, the long-term effect of wheat cultivar selection on soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks
will depend on the amount of root biomass that is stabilized in the soil.
Our results suggest that the process of wheat selection for high-yielding
cultivars resulted in lower amounts of belowground carbon translocation,
with potentially important effects on SOC stocks. Further research is
necessary to quantify the long-term importance of this effect.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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