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Root-mediated acidification, phosphatase activity and the phosphorus-cycling microbial community enhance phosphorus mobilization in the rhizosphere of wetland plants.

Authors :
Li, Cai
Ma, Xin
Wang, Yan
Sun, Qin
Chen, Musong
Zhang, Chaosheng
Ding, Shiming
Dai, Zhihui
Source :
Water Research. May2024, Vol. 255, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• Colocalization of Fe and P was observed in the root Fe plaque. • Localized rhizospheric acidification facilitated the Ca-bound P solubilization. • An increase in phosphatase activity promoted the organic P mineralization. • P-cycling microbial communities improved rhizospheric P mobilization. Rhizoremediation of wetland plants is an environmentally friendly strategy for sediment phosphorous (P) removal, the basic underlying principle of which is the complex interactions between roots and microorganisms. This study investigated the immobilization and mobilization mechanisms of P in the rhizosphere of wetland plants using high-resolution spatial visualization techniques and metagenomic sequencing. Two-dimensional visualization of the spatial distribution of P, iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) indicated that the sequestration of Fe-oxides rather than Mn-oxides caused the depletion of labile P, resulting in an increase in the Fe-adsorbed P fraction. Plants altered the rhizospheric environments and P-cycling microbial community to mobilize low-availability P from sediments. Mineral P solubilization and organic P mineralization were enhanced by local acidification and increased phosphatase activity, respectively. Microbial P mobilization also increased with increasing relative abundances of P solubilization and mineralization genes (gcd and phnW) and decreasing P transportation genes (ugpA, ugpB , and pit) genes in the rhizosphere. These processes led to the remobilization of 10.04 % of inorganic P, and 15.23 % of organic P, in the rhizosphere during the incubation period. However, the resupply of P via the above processes did not compensate for the depletion of rhizospheric P via root uptake and mineral sequestration. Our results provide novel insights into the mechanisms of rhizospheric P cycling, which will help to inform future phytoremediation strategies. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
255
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176718595
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2024.121548