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Maize and soybean experience fierce competition from soil microorganisms for the uptake of organic and inorganic nitrogen and sulphur: A pot test using 13C, 15N, 14C, and 35S labelling
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Maize and soybean experience fierce competition from soil microorganisms for the uptake of organic and inorganic nitrogen and sulphur: A pot test using 13C, 15N, 14C, and 35S labelling

Qingxu Ma, Wankun Pan, Sheng Tang, Xiaodan Sun, Yinan Xie, David R. Chadwick, Paul W. Hill, Linlin Si, Lianghuan Wu and Davey L. Jones
Soil biology & biochemistry, Vol.157, 108260
2021

Abstract

maize And soybean intercropping Methionine and cysteine Organic nitrogen and sulphur Soil microorganisms
Nitrogen (N) and sulphur (S) are essential nutrients for plant growth. A pot experiment was conducted to verify whether maize and soybean under monoculture and intercropping could utilise N- and S-containing amino acids when competing with soil microorganisms. Maize and soybean were able to utilise methionine (Met; 1.9–2.2% of total addition) and cysteine (Cys; 0.6–1.6% of total addition) as N and S sources, however they faced competition with soil microorganisms. Six hours after microbial uptake, 45.3–64.0% of the S from Met was retained in the microbial biomass, while there was much lower retention from Cys (16.8–34.5%), and 32.5–44.1% of the S from Cys and 15.6–33.3% of that from Met was transformed to SO42−. Cys was a superior S source for plants compared to Met, as higher SO42− release from Cys could support plant growth. Both maize and soybean plants took up NH4+ (98–99% of total N uptake) and SO42− (85–90%) as their main N and S sources from soil. The N from Cys and Met accounted for only ~1% of total N uptake from soil, and organic Cys and Met accounted for only ~0.2% of the total N uptake, indicating that these two amino acids have limited effects on plant N nutrition, due to the high inorganic N content in agricultural soil. However, the Cys and Met contribution (i.e., organic S uptake and mineral S uptake originating from Cys and Met) to total S uptake (10–15%) was an order of magnitude higher than their N contributions, suggesting that Cys and Met play an important role in soil S nutrition. Intercropping altered the uptake but not the preference for N and S forms in maize and soybean. Overall, the results suggest that S-containing amino acids are important S sources for plant growth even at a lower concentration in soil, but that they play a limited role in plant N nutrition due to a larger inorganic N pool in agricultural soil.

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Source: InCites

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.45 Soil Science
3.45.112 Soil Carbon Dynamics
Web Of Science research areas
Soil Science
ESI research areas
Agricultural Sciences
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