Impact of altered flooding and crop rotation regimes on microbial communities and activities involved in nitrogen fixation and nitrogen cycling

Applicant Professorin Dr. Barbara Reinhold-Hurek
Subject Area Microbial Ecology and Applied Microbiology
Term from 2011 to 2019
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 194371065
 

Project Description

We will study the effect of crop rotation between upland maize and submerged rice cultivation and between flooded and non-flooded conditions on the processes involved in methane production and on the composition of the methanogenic microbial community. This will be done by a combination of δ13C analysis in root organic carbon, soil organic carbon, acetate, CO2 and CH4; of pulse-labelling experiments using 13C-CO2; and of molecular analysis of the 16S rRNA gene of the methanogenic archaeal community in soil and rhizosphere. As result we expect to obtain turnover rates of carbon, the relative contribution of different pathways to CH4 production and the relative contribution of root-derived versus soil organic matter-derived carbon to CH4 production, all these parameters in relation to the composition of the methanogenic archaeal community. The study will show how crop rotation will affect community composition and processes involved in production and emission of the green-house gas methane.
DFG Programme Research Units
Subproject of FOR 1701:  Introducing Non-Flooded Crops in Rice-Dominated Landscapes: Impact on Carbon, Nitrogen and Water Cycles (ICON)
Participating Person Dr. Thomas Hurek