Interacting effects of root exudate compounds and δ13C-barley shoot
residue on micro-mechanical behaviour of soil measured by rheometry
Abstract
Laboratory studies have shown that rhizodeposits could lead to either
soil structural formation or dispersion depending on plant species, soil
conditions, and microbial activity. However, these studies have usually
been conducted in dry soils and rarely considered the combined effect of
rhizodeposit and organic residues on soil structure. This study
hypothesizes that root exudates promote soil dispersion initially, but
over time decomposition of root exudates produce binding agents that
promote stable soil structure in the rhizosphere. To test this
hypothesis, a sandy loam soil sieved to < 500 µm particle size
was first amended with root exudate compounds (14.4 mg C g-1),
δ13C-barley residue (0.44 mg C g-1 soil), or both. Six replicate samples
per treatment were packed in cores to a bulk density of 1.27 g cm-3 and
then equilibrated on a tension table at -2 kPa matric potential.
Rheological measurements of flow characteristics (dynamic viscosity) and
strength (storage modulus, loss modulus, tan δ, and yield stress) of the
control and amended soils were obtained immediately after amendment and
after twelve days of incubation at 20 oC. Only root exudate compounds
initially decreased the capacity of soil to retain water at -2 kPa by
21% and by 49% after incubation. Likewise, the yield stress of root
exudate amended soil was significantly (P < 0.05) lower than
that of the unamended soil, reflecting dispersion of soil. However,
microbial decomposition/activities significantly (P < 0.05)
increased yield stress over the corresponding pre-incubation values for
these treatments by 200% (root exudate) and 230% (root exudate +
δ13C-barley residue). These results confirmed the hypothesized dual
effect of root exudates on rhizosphere structure. The initial soil
dispersion may facilitate root growth by augmenting soil penetrability
and releasing nutrients that were occluded in soil aggregates, whereas
stable soil structure is achieved upon decomposition of root exudates.