Aims Increasing droughts affect crop yield and health.
Plants can respond to drought by adapting their root
biomass, root morphology, and quality and quantity of
rhizodeposition to improve water and nutrient uptake.
Besides droughts, agricultural management influences
roots and rhizodeposition; however, it is not well
studied how agricultural management can affect the
response of roots and rhizodeposition to drought.
Methods A semi-continuous 13CO2 isotope labelling
experiment was performed in a long-term field experiment
comparing biodynamic, mixed conventional,
and mineral conventional cropping systems. Rainout
shelters were installed to induce drought. Root,
net rhizodeposition, and the rhizosphere microbiome
were determined at ripening of wheat.
Results Drought enhanced the total root carbon
mainly through the increase of fine roots. Fine root
carbon under drought was primarily enhanced in the
mixed conventional and biodynamic cropping system,
both receiving farmyard manure, whereas no
increase was measured in the mineral fertilized conventional
system. Net rhizodeposition carbon was
enhanced in all cropping systems under drought,
particularly in the first 0.25 m. While some plantgrowth-
promoting genera such as Streptomyces
and Rhizophagus showed relative increases under
drought, other plant growth-promoting genera often
involved in nitrogen fixation such as Rhodoferax
and Mesorhizobium were decreased.
Conclusion This field trial suggests that drought
increases total belowground carbon input via fine root
and net rhizodeposition carbon inputs. Since fine root
carbon increased under drought in cropping systems
with farmyard manure, adding manure under future
drought periods could be advantageous to increase
soil carbon inputs and improve nutrient foraging.