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Variable water cycles have a greater impact on wheat growth and soil nitrogen response than constant watering

Cousins, Olivia H.; Garnett, Trevor P.; Rasmussen, Amanda; Mooney, Sacha J.; Smernik, Ronald J.; Brien, Chris J.; Cavagnaro, Timothy R.

Authors

Olivia H. Cousins

Trevor P. Garnett

SACHA MOONEY sacha.mooney@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Soil Physics

Ronald J. Smernik

Chris J. Brien

Timothy R. Cavagnaro



Abstract

© 2019 Current climate change models project that water availability will become more erratic in the future. With soil nitrogen (N) supply coupled to water availability, it is important to understand the combined effects of variable water and N supply on food crop plants (above- and below-ground). Here we present a study that precisely controls soil moisture and compares stable soil moisture contents with a controlled wetting-drying cycle. Our aim was to identify how changes in soil moisture and N concentration affect shoot-root biomass, N acquisition in wheat, and soil N cycling. Using a novel gravimetric platform allowing fine-scale control of soil moisture dynamics, a 3 × 3 factorial experiment was conducted on wheat plants subjected to three rates of N application (0, 25 and 75 mg N/kg soil) and three soil moisture regimes (two uniform treatments: 23.5 and 13% gravimetric moisture content (herein referred to as Well-watered and Reduced water, respectively), and a Variable treatment which cycled between the two). Plant biomass, soil N and microbial biomass carbon were measured at three developmental stages: tillering (Harvest 1), flowering (Harvest 2), and early grain milk development (Harvest 3). Reduced water supply encouraged root growth when combined with medium and high N. Plant growth was more responsive to N than the water treatments imposed, with a 15-fold increase in biomass between the high and no added N treatment plants. Both uniform soil water treatments resulted in similar plant biomass, while the Variable water treatment resulted in less biomass overall, suggesting wheat prefers consistency whether at a Well-watered or Reduced water level. Plants did not respond well to variable soil moisture, highlighting the need to understand plant adaptation and biomass allocation with resource limitation. This is particularly relevant to developing irrigation practices, but also in the design of water availability experiments.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 11, 2019
Online Publication Date May 15, 2019
Publication Date Jan 1, 2020
Deposit Date Sep 29, 2020
Journal Plant Science
Print ISSN 0168-9452
Electronic ISSN 1873-2259
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 290
Article Number 110146
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2019.05.009
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3358658
Publisher URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S016894521831344X?via%3Dihub