Technical note: Manipulating interactions between plant stress responses and soil methane oxidation rates
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Xu, Cheng-Yuan
Bai, Shahla H
Xu, Zhihong
Smaill, Simeon J
Clinton, Peter W
Chen, Chengrong
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Abstract
It has recently been hypothesised that ethylene, released into soil by stressed plants, reduces the oxidation of methane by methanotroph. To test this, a field trial was established in which maize plants were grown with and without soil moisture stress, and the effects of addition aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG; an ethylene biosynthesis inhibitor) and biochar (increases soil water holding capacity and reduces plant stress) were determined following the static incubation of soil samples. AVG increased methane oxidation rates by 50 % (P=0.039), but only in the absence of irrigation. No other treatment effects were observed. This result provides evidence for a positive feedback system between plant stress, ethylene production, and impacts on methanotrophic activity.
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BIOGEOSCIENCES
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15
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13
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© Author(s) 2018. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
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Earth sciences
Environmental sciences
Biological sciences
Ecology
Physical geography and environmental geoscience
Environmental management