Teaching Organic Farming and Gardening

(Michael S) #1

Soil Biology and Ecology


16 | Unit 2.3


f ) Root exudates


i. Amounts


• 20–50% more C enters the soil from exudates, sloughed cells, and root hairs than

is present as fibrous roots at end of growing season = substantial contribution to
SOM


• Amount of exudates increased by:



  • wetting, after a drying spell

  • physical or chemical injury (i.e., mowing, grazing of perennial grass cover crop)

  • abrasion, phytotoxic residues, osmotic stress


ii. Types


• Carbohydrates and amino acids: Most-researched compounds



  • 10 sugars, glucose and fructose most common

  • 25 amino acids


• Also organic acids, fatty acids, sterols, enzymes, volatile compounds, and growth

factors


• Difficult to separate plant and microbe sources


iii. Exudates released from meristem zone


• Nematodes and zoospores congregate there


iv. Foliar sprays may move into roots (depends on molecular weight)


• Herbicides, antibiotics may also move into roots


• Streptomycin moved from Coleus leaves to roots in 24 hrs


• Bacteria suppressed by the streptomycin


g) Variations in root exudates


i. r effect increases with age


ii. r effect decreases with senescence of plants


iii. Annual crop plants have greater r effect than trees


iv. Legume r effect stronger than non-legume


v. r effect may be strongest at flowering


vi. Stronger in sandy soils than in heavier soils


vii. Highest r effect in dune and desert soils


h) Management effects


i. Synthetic fertilizers


• Sometimes no effect


• Sometimes increase r:s indirectly through stimulation of plant growth


ii. Organic manures


• Same indirect positive effect on r:s


• Also may decrease ratio since edaphic (s) microbes are also stimulated by organic
matter input


• After 4 weeks of decomposition, r:s generally increases



  1. Soil organisms


a) Bacteria


i. Most responsive to plant exudates


ii. 2 to 20 fold increase in bacterial populations in r vs. s


iii. Pseudomonas most consistently abundant in rhizosphere


iv. Also Agrobacterium (biocontrol agent) and Achromobacter


Students’ Lecture Outline
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