Has agricultural intensification impacted maize root traits and rhizosphere interactions related to organic N acquisition?

Author:

Schmidt Jennifer E1,Poret-Peterson Amisha2,Lowry Carolyn J3,Gaudin Amélie C M1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Sciences, University of California at Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA, USA

2. USDA-ARS Crops Pathology and Genetics Research Unit, University of California, Davis, CA, USA

3. Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of New Hampshire, 46 College Road, Durham, NH, USA

Abstract

Abstract Plant–microbe interactions in the rhizosphere influence rates of organic matter mineralization and nutrient cycling that are critical to sustainable agricultural productivity. Agricultural intensification, particularly the introduction of synthetic fertilizer in the USA, altered the abundance and dominant forms of nitrogen (N), a critical plant nutrient, potentially imposing selection pressure on plant traits and plant–microbe interactions regulating N cycling and acquisition. We hypothesized that maize adaptation to synthetic N fertilization altered root functional traits and rhizosphere microbial nutrient cycling, reducing maize ability to acquire N from organic sources. Six maize genotypes released pre-fertilizer (1936, 1939, 1942) or post-fertilizer (1984, 1994, 2015) were grown in rhizoboxes containing patches of 15N-labelled clover/vetch residue. Multivariate approaches did not identify architectural traits that strongly and consistently predicted rhizosphere processes, though metrics of root morphological plasticity were linked to carbon- and N-cycling enzyme activities. Root traits, potential activities of extracellular enzymes (BG, LAP, NAG, urease), abundances of N-cycling genes (amoA, narG, nirK, nirS, nosZ) and uptake of organic N did not differ between eras of release despite substantial variation among genotypes and replicates. Thus, agricultural intensification does not appear to have impaired N cycling and acquisition from organic sources by modern maize and its rhizobiome. Improved mechanistic understanding of rhizosphere processes and their response to selective pressures will contribute greatly to rhizosphere engineering for sustainable agriculture.

Funder

University of California, Davis

College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences

Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Agricultural Experiment Station

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science

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