313-5 Biological N2 Fixation and Its Main Contributor in a Flooded Rice-Soil System By an Air-Tight 15N2 Incubation Technique Under Natural Sunshine for 70d.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Biology & Biochemistry
See more from this Session: Biological Nitrogen Fixation
Tuesday, November 4, 2014: 3:20 PM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102A
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Zubin Xie, Institute of Soil Science/Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, CHINA
Rice field is a typical hot spot to fix N2 biologically, but the direct evidence of N2 fixation and the proportional contribution of heterotrophic and phototrophic N2 fixation and its main contributor are difficult to assess. Here we report on the development and application of a novel field-based 15N2 labelling technique in which a flooded rice-soil system was exposed to a 15N2-enriched atmosphere to assess the biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) in paddy fields and 15N2-DNA-stable isotope probing (SIP) to study active microbes to fix N2. One month old rice seedlings (Oryza sativa L.) were transplanted to non N fertilized pots of flooded soil and exposed to a 15N2-enriched atmosphere (approx. 7 atom% 15N) in a gas-tight growth chamber for 70 days.

Results showed that the highest 15N-enrichment 3.7551 atom% was observed in blue green algae in unplanted pots. After 70 days incubation, 49% of the total 15N fixed in flooded rice-soil system was found in the plants, while 51% was found in the flooded soil. Rice planting enhanced both phototrophic and heterotrophic BNF and increased the proportion of heterotrophic BNF to phototrophic BNF from 0.50 in treatment without rice to 0.99 in treatment with rice.

Clear differences were observed in diazotrophic communities during the 15N2-DNA-SIP study that a major proportion of 15N2-fixers were affiliated with filamentous thermophilic cyanobacteria and geneus Aoarcus in rice-growing surface soils while the genera Geobacter and Desulfovibrio were dorminant in uncultivated soils.

The findings suggested that rice benefit greatly from BNF processes and in turn rice growing can enhance both phototrophic and heterotrophic BNF significantly, and a major improvement for quantification of BNF and active diazotrophs exploration in flooded rice fields based on field 15N2 labelling technique.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Biology & Biochemistry
See more from this Session: Biological Nitrogen Fixation
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