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L8. Terrestrial introduction and N/P cycle • Terrestrial biogeochemistry usually focuses on the role of plants and soil microbes • Organisms such as mycorrhizal fungi and nitrogen-fixing bacteria often help plants to acquire mineral nutrients from soil Twenty-five percent of the Earth’s surface is covered with plants The green parts of the blue planet. Image courtesy of NASA/NOAA. Biogeochemical cycling in the terrestrial environment • Terrestrial biogeochemistry usually focuses on the role of plants and soil microbes • Organisms such as mycorrhizal fungi and nitrogen-fixing bacteria often help plants to acquire nutrients from soil Clover roots with nodules containing N-fixing bacteria. The terrestrial and aquatic biogeochemical cycles are linked 40% of the Earth’s land is now used for agriculture. Image of Bac Son Valley, Vietnam. Lecture outline 1. Nutrients essential for terrestrial plant life 2. Nutrient uptake by plants and factors affecting soil nutrient availability 3. The terrestrial nitrogen cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture 4. The terrestrial phosphorus cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture Lecture outline 1. Nutrients essential for terrestrial plant life 2. Nutrient uptake by plants and factors affecting soil nutrient availability 3. The terrestrial nitrogen cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture 4. The terrestrial phosphorus cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture Essential nutrient elements 1. In its absence a plant cannot complete the normal life cycle 2. The element is part of an essential plant constituent or metabolite The essential nutrient elements of higher plants and their concentrations considered adequate for growth Macronutrients are required in large quantities and usually involved in structure of materials Micronutrients have catalytic and regulatory roles such as enzyme activators Taiz & Zeiger (2010) Plant Physiology, Fifth Edition. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Nutrient classification according to biochemical function Amino acids Phospholipid bilayer Nutrient classification according to biochemical function Enzyme cofactors Chlorophyll Nutrient classification according to biochemical function Photosynthesis Lecture outline 1. Nutrients essential for terrestrial plant life 2. Nutrient uptake by plants and factors affecting soil nutrient availability 3. The terrestrial nitrogen cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture 4. The terrestrial phosphorus cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture Mineral ions cross the root apoplast and symplast • Mineral ions enter through the root and may immediately enter the symplast of an epidermal cell, or diffuse through the apoplast of the epidermis and cortex. All ions enter the symplast at the Casparian band via membrane transport proteins. Taiz & Zeiger (2010) Plant Physiology, Fifth Edition. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Three classes of membrane transport proteins • Channels are transmembrane proteins that function as selective pores. Carrier proteins do not have pores that extend across the membrane, rather, they bind ions on one side of the membrane and release them on the other side (passive transport) • Primary active transport is carried out by pumps and uses energy directly. In plant plasma membranes the most prominent pumps are those that pump H+ or Ca2+ ions Taiz & Zeiger (2010) Plant Physiology, Fifth Edition. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Secondary active transport • Coupling the energetically uphill transport of one solute with the energetically downhill transport of another Taiz & Zeiger (2010) Plant Physiology, Fifth Edition. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Parent material affects nutrient availability • Rocks or sediments that give rise to soil determine many aspects of soil fertility. Granite gives rise to lower P and other cations compared to limestone; serpentine rocks have high concentrations of heavy metals. • In relatively young landscapes (following recent volcanic activity or glaciation), P availability is relatively high and N tends to be the key nutrient limiting plant productivity • In ancient, highly weathered soils (like Australia) P is the keylimiting nutrient Soil pH affects the solubility and availability of nutrient elements in organic soils Mo deficiency in peanut by low pH Fe deficiency in palms by high pH Some plants can change the rhizosphere pH • The solubility of Fe decreases 1000-fold for each unit increase in soil pH in the range 4-9; that of Mn, Cu, and Zn decreases 100-fold • Plants can strongly reduce rhizosphere pH by excreting organic acids or protons • When Fe supply is insufficient, Helianthus annuus (sunflower) plants lower the pH of the root solution from approximately 7 to 4. Similar seen for corn and soybean. • Mediated by a proton-pumping ATPase at the plasma membrane of roots, with cations being exchanged for H+ Cation exchange and soil fertility • Soil particles, both organic and inorganic, have predominately negative charges on their surfaces • Mineral cations (NH4+ , K+, etc.) adsorb to the negative surface and are not easily leached out by water, providing a nutrient reserve. The degree to which a soil can adsorb and exchange ions is termed its cation exchange capacity (CEC) • Mineral anions (NO3-, Cl-), on the other hand, tend to be repelled by the negative surface and remain dissolved in soil solution. Anion exchange therefore small compared to cation exchange Lecture outline 1. Nutrients essential for terrestrial plant life 2. Nutrient uptake by plants and factors affecting soil nutrient availability 3. The terrestrial nitrogen cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture 4. The terrestrial phosphorus cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture Nitrogen (N) • N is a key constituent of many important molecules including proteins, nucleic acids, chlorophyll and certain hormones • Although the Earth’s atmosphere is 80% N, only certain prokaryote organisms – bacteria and cyanobacteria – can utilize gaseous N directly • Natural processes fix about 190 1012 g y-1 of N: • Lightning – accounts for 8% of N fixation; occurs when lightning converts water vapor and oxygen into highly reactive free radicals, free hydrogen atoms, and free oxygen atoms that attack molecular nitrogen (N2) to form nitric acid (HNO3) which falls to Earth with rain • Photochemical reactions – accounts for 2% of N fixation; reactions between nitric oxide (NO) and ozone (O3) that produce HNO3 • Biological N fixation – accounts for 90% of N fixation; occurs when bacteria fix N2 into ammonia (NH3) Biological N fixation • Accounts for most of the conversion of atmospheric N2 into ammonium • Most bacteria that fix N are free-living in the soil while a few form symbiotic associations with higher plants such as beans and legumes The cereal-legume intercrop systems are one of the most important intercropping systems The terrestrial nitrogen cycle Humans have significantly altered the N cycle with the Haber-Bosch process • Discovered by Fritz Haber in 1909 and scaled up by Carl Bosch in 1913 • Under high temperatures (about 200°C) and high pressure (about 200 atmospheres) and in the presence of a metal catalyst (usually Fe), N2 combines with hydrogen to form ammonia • Worldwide industrial production of N fertilizer now amounts to more than 100 1012 g y-1 (compared to 190 1012 g y-1 of N fixed naturally) • Projected to increase to 165 1012 g y-1 by 2050 N fertilizer production and application also produces greenhouse gases (nitrous oxide) N2O has become the third most important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide and methane Nitrogen Deposition (mg N/m2/yr) 5000 2000 1000 750 500 250 100 50 25 5 1993 1860 (Galloway et al. 2003) USDFertilizers $500 million endworth up in our of nitrogen rivers and fertilizer oceansgoes down the Mississippi river each year Excess N can cause hypoxic dead zones to occur Excess N can cause hypoxic dead zones to occur One of the world’s largest dead zones develops each spring/summer in the Gulf of Mexico, where the Mississippi River dumps high-nutrient runoff from its vast drainage basin. In 2002 the Gulf’s dead zone swelled to 22,000 square kilometers. Researchers have identified more than 200 dead zones around the world Increased nitrous oxide (N2O) production also occurs in dead zones. In suboxic water at depths of less than 300 feet, microbial denitrification rates can be 10,000 times higher than the average for the open ocean (‘Interesting times for nitrous oxide’, Science, 12 March 2010) Lecture outline 1. Nutrients essential for terrestrial plant life 2. Nutrient uptake by plants and factors affecting soil nutrient availability 3. The terrestrial nitrogen cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture 4. The terrestrial phosphorus cycle and anthropogenic changes as a result of agriculture Phosphorus (P) • Found largely as phosphate esters which play key roles in photosynthesis and metabolism. Other phosphate esters are the nucleotides that make up DNA/RNA and phospholipids in cell membranes • The P cycle differs from the other major biogeochemical cycles (N, C, S, H2O) in that it does not include a gas phase; it is a sedimentary cycle • When it rains, phosphates are removed from rocks (via weathering) and are distributed throughout both soils and water, plants take up the phosphate ions from the soil • Unlike N, P cycling includes significant inorganic (mineral) reactions The terrestrial phosphorus cycle Plant acquisition of P from soil • In agricultural soils, 30-70% of all P is present in organic form. In nutrient-poor grasslands, peat soils and forest soils this may be as much as 80-95% • Plants can only take up inorganic phosphate which is usually released by microbial enzymes (phosphatases). • Some plant species can use organic forms of P (nucleic acids, phospholipids, inositol phosphate, glycerophosphates) by releasing phosphatases that hydrolyze organic P-containing compounds, releasing Pi that is absorbed by roots. BOTA30003 Arbuscular mycorrhizas occur in 82% of all angiosperms • Vast majority of plant species form symbiotic associations with mycorrhizal fungi • Arbuscular mycorrhizas (AMs) are the most widespread. A large fraction of the fungal tissue is within the root cortical cells • The mycorrhizal associations enhance the plant’s belowground absorbing surface Many Australian agricultural soil are acutely P deficient Profitable crop production has only been possible through widespread applications of P fertilisers. Cluster roots (dense aggregations of lateral roots with long root hairs) are plant adaptations to the very low P soils of WA and South Africa Cluster roots promote nutrient uptake by their large surface area and production of exudates that increase nutrient solubility. Cluster roots often form a dense mat near the soil surface in contact with decomposing litter, support populations of Psolubilising bacteria , secrete organic acids and are very efficient at P adsorption. Effect of organic acid (carboxylates) secretion on inorganic and organic P mobilization in soil Cluster root morphologies induced in Proteaceae, Restionaceae, Cyperaceae and Fabaceae by low P supply (Lambers et al. 2006 page 700) Humans have significantly altered the P cycle with widespread application of P fertilizers • Phosphate fertilizer is usually applied as “phosphate rock” composed primarily of phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5). • Main commercial reserves of phosphate rock are in just three countries – China, USA and Morocco • Currently known phosphate rock reserves will last for the next 300-400 years Marocco & Western Sahara The fate of P added to soil 80-90% of the P applied to soils is sorbed by soil particles or combines with other elements through complex geochemical processes to form insoluble complexes. Most plants are unable to access the P. Soil P surpluses are building up in many agricultural areas • P fertilizer application to croplands is around 14.2 1012 g y-1 , of which more than half is applied to cereal crops • An additional 9.6 1012 g y-1 of P is applied to crops as livestock manure • P removed by crops is approximately 12.3 1012 g y-1 • Results in a global P agronomic surplus of 11.5 1012 g y-1 (MacDonald et al. 2011) Improving the nutrient-use efficiency of our major food crops will have enormous environmental and economic benefits