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.2012 Jul 26;1(2):196-221.
doi: 10.3390/biology1020196.

Soil oxidation-reduction in wetlands and its impact on plant functioning

Affiliations

Soil oxidation-reduction in wetlands and its impact on plant functioning

S R Pezeshki et al. Biology (Basel)..

Abstract

Soil flooding in wetlands is accompanied by changes in soil physical and chemical characteristics. These changes include the lowering of soil redox potential (Eh) leading to increasing demand for oxygen within the soil profile as well as production of soil phytotoxins that are by-products of soil reduction and thus, imposing potentially severe stress on plant roots. Various methods are utilized for quantifying plant responses to reducing soil conditions that include measurement of radial oxygen transport, plant enzymatic responses, and assessment of anatomical/morphological changes. However, the chemical properties and reducing nature of soil environment in which plant roots are grown, including oxygen demand, and other associated processes that occur in wetland soils, pose a challenge to evaluation and comparison of plant responses that are reported in the literature. This review emphasizes soil-plant interactions in wetlands, drawing attention to the importance of quantifying the intensity and capacity of soil reduction for proper evaluation of wetland plant responses, particularly at the process and whole-plant levels. Furthermore, while root oxygen-deficiency may partially account for plant stress responses, the importance of soil phytotoxins, produced as by-products of low soil Eh conditions, is discussed and the need for development of methods to allow differentiation of plant responses to reduced or anaerobic soil conditions vs. soil phytotoxins is emphasized.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Oxidation-reduction potential in wetland soils: relationship of intensity and capacity of reduction in soil to wetland plant stress.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Metabolic pathways under aerobic and anaerobic conditions (from Reddy and DeLaune [9]).
Figure 3
Figure 3
The relationship between net photosynthesis and H2S concentration in the sediment for two wetland species,Panicum hemitomom andSpartina alterniflora (from Pezeshkiet al. [99,107].
Figure 4
Figure 4
Changes in net photosynthesis ofTypha domingensis in response to soil redox conditions. Values are presented as percent of controls (from Pezeshkiet al. [157]).
Figure 5
Figure 5
Response of light saturated leaf photosynthesis to root-zone redox potential (Eh) for 5-year-old (A)Fraxinus pennsylvanica and (B)Quercus bicolor in a created wetland (from Pennington and Walters [28]).
Figure 6
Figure 6
A generalized relationship between photosynthetic activity in wetland plants and soil redox potential (from Pezeshki [22,23]).
Figure 7
Figure 7
Biomass accumulation, root/weight ratio, and survival of two woody speciesTaxodium distichum andCarya illinoesis in response to changes in soil Eh conditions (from Pezeshki and Delaune [158]).
Figure 8
Figure 8
Responses of root elongation inSpartina patens, a brackish marsh species, to soil redox potential (Eh) (from Pezeshki and DeLaune [153]).
Figure 9
Figure 9
Radial O2 loss (ROL) inSpartina patens in response to changes in soil reduction capacity while soil reduction intensity was maintained at −200 mV (Kludze and DeLaune [14]).
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References

    1. Gambrell R.P., Patrick W.H. Chemical and Microbiological Properties of Anaerobic Soils nad Sediments. In: Hook D.D., Crawford R.M.M., editors. Plant Life in Anaerobic Environments. Ann Arbor Science; Ann Arbor, MI, USA: 1978. pp. 375–423.
    1. Ponnamperuma F.N. Effects of Flooding on Soils. In: Kozlowski T.T., editor. Flooding and Plant Growth. Academic Press Inc.; Orlando, FL, USA: 1984. pp. 1–44.
    1. Gambrell R.P., DeLaune R.D., Patrick W.H. Redox Processes in Soils Following Oxygen Depletion. In: Jackson M.B., Davies D.D., Lambers H., editors. Plant Life Under Oxygen Deprivation: Ecology, Physiology, and Biochemistry. SPB Academic Publishing BV; The Hague, The Netherlands: 1991. pp. 101–117.
    1. Jackson M.B., Drew M.C. Effects of Flooding on Growth and Metabolism of Herbaceous Plants. In: Kozlowski T.T., editor. Flooding and Plant Growth. Academic Press, Inc; Waltham, MA, USA: 1984. pp. 47–128.
    1. Greenway H., Armstrong W., Colmer T.D. Coditions leading to high CO2 (>5 kPa) in waterlogged flooded soils and possible effects on root growth and metabolism. Ann. Bot. 2006;98:9–32. - PMC - PubMed

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