Browsing by Subject "Boden"
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Publication Biochar amendment for C sequestration in a temperate agroecosystem : implications for microbial C- and N-cycling(2018) Bamminger, Chris; Kandeler, EllenClimate warming will have great impact on terrestrial ecosystems. Different soil properties such as temperature and moisture will be altered, thereby influencing C- and N-cycles, microbial activity as well as plant growth. This may contribute to the observed increase in soil greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions under climate change. Therefore, new options are needed to mitigate theses projected consequences. Biochar is primarily suggested to be effective in long-term C sequestration in agricultural soils due to its long-term stability. In addition, it could be applied to improve various soil properties, plant growth and to reduce soil GHG emissions. To date, knowledge about such beneficial biochar effects in soil under predicted warming climate is extremely scarce. In the first study, a slow-pyrolysis biochar from Miscanthus x giganteus feedstock (600 °C, 30 Min.) was incubated for short time (37d) under controlled laboratory conditions in agricultural soil in the presence of earthworms and N-rich litter (Phacelia tanacetifolia Benth.). Biochar increased microbial abundances and the fungal-to-bacterial PLFA ratio after 37 days in arable soil applied with litter suggesting improved living conditions for microorganisms with biochar. Fungi may benefit most from newly created habitats due to colonizable biochar pores and surfaces. Additionally, fungi could have also mineralized small amounts of recalcitrant biochar-C during plant litter decomposition. Without litter, biochar led to interactions between earthworms and soil microorganisms resulting in enhanced bacterial and fungal abundances. This indicates better growth habitats for soil microbes in earthworm casts containing biochar. Soil respiration and metabolic quotients (qCO2) and N2O emissions (in litter treatments) were decreased after biochar application suggesting a more efficient microbial community and underscoring the GHG mitigation potential of the used biochar. The field experiment, investigated in the second and third study, focused on the stability and long-term soil C sequestration potential of comparable Miscanthus biochar (850 °C, 30 Min.). Related effects on soil GHG emissions, physical, chemical and microbiological soil properties as well as plant growth were determined in an agroecosystem at year-round elevated soil temperature (+2.5 °C, since 2008). The second study investigated the short-term effects of biochar on microbial abundances and growth of winter rapeseed during the first year after field application to a warmed temperate arable soil. It was found that fungal biomass and the fungal-to-bacterial ratio were increased in the warmed biochar plots only after three months in the presence of spring barley litter from the previous growing season. The disappearance of this effect points to an overall high stability of the investigated biochar. Moreover, biochar proved to be effective in mitigating negative effects of seasonal dryness on microbial abundances and early plant growth in the dry spring period in 2014. However, biochar had no effect on final aboveground biomass of winter rapeseed at harvest in the first growing season. As shown in the third study, after two vegetation periods of winter rapeseed and spring wheat, the assumption that plant productivity in already fertile temperate arable soils is unlikely to be further enhanced with biochar amendment, was confirmed. Total CO2 emissions after two years were not reduced by biochar and remained unchanged even under warming suggesting a high degradation stability of the used biochar. N2O emissions were increased in biochar-amended soil at elevated soil temperature, presumably due to enhanced water and fertilizer retention with biochar. By using the global warming potential (GWP100) of total soil GHG emissions, the storage of biochar-C in soil was estimated to compensate warming-induced elevated soil GHG emissions for 20 years. To conclude, this thesis revealed that biochar may have only minor influence on soil microorganisms and crop growth in temperate, fertile arable field soils. However, it was shown that biochar could be a valuable tool for C sequestration in temperate arable soils, thus potentially offsetting a warming-induced increase in GHG emissions. In order to face climate change impacts, more long-term studies on microbiological effects and the C sequestration potential of biochar in cultivated soil under warming are urgently needed.Publication Ecosystemic Effect Indicators to assess Effects of agricultural Landuse on Ecosystems(2000) Merkle, Andrea Hildegard; Kaupenjohann, MartinAgricultural production and its material and non-material emissions may cause side-effects in ecosystems. These effects have to be assessed and evaluated. The aim of the present study is to provide a tool that relates emissions of agricultural production and affected ecosystems. This tool represents an indicator approach. The needed indicators are defined as ecosystemic effect indicators (EEI). Within the study a multistage procedure is developed which should be pursued in identifying indicators. To assess which emissions must be regarded in detail an estimation of relevance by means of an emission and input classification preceeds the indicator development. Subsequently, EEI are developed for the relevant emissions and inputs. The derivation of EEI is carried out by the following steps: 1) One starts top-down at the target 'maintaining the ecosystem functioning' in this work depicted by the utility functions. A list with characteristics that are dependent on hierarchical levels is compiled for each relevant function. 2) Starting at one specific input a list of potential receptors is compiled bottom-up. These represent potential effect indicators. 3) By overlapping the lists of the steps 1 and 2 one yields EEI specific for the utility function and the input under consideration. The step 3 is performed by means of expert knowledge. The advantage of the indicator approach is its operativeness which is site-independent. The results of the study show that EEI may be deemed to be promising tools to picture human influences in particular of agricultural production on ecosystems. The results of the case study provide the basis to assess effects on ecosystems for some major stressors. In cases where critical values are available site specific quantitative statements concerning ecological effects within the frame of sustainable agriculture are enabled by the present method for the derivation of indicators. Subsequently, necessary measures can be deducedPublication Environmental effects on physical properties of Geohumus and effects of its application on drought responses in maize(2013) Duong, Van Nha; Asch, FolkardGeohumus belongs to a new generation of soil melioration/hydrophilic polymers; however, evidence is limited with regard to both, the ability of Geohumus to store water in variable abiotic environments and the effects of Geohumus or other hydrophilic polymers on plant genotypes in response to drought condition. Therefore, this study aims at providing necessary and complementary information for improving Geohumus usage under field condition, and to improve our ecophysiological understanding of the interactions between Geohumus, plant genotype and the growing environment. Three series of experiments were conducted to investigate (1) how abiotic factors affect the water holding capacity and restorability of Geohumus, (2) how the application of Geohumus affects plant morphological and physiological traits in response to different irrigation scenarios such as full irrigation, water deficit, and re-watering and (3) how the application of Geohumus in different soil types affects drought induced plant root-shoot communication. Water holding capacity (WHC) and restorability of Geohumus in mL water g-1 was determined by immersing teabags with fresh and used Geohumus in prepared media under laboratory conditions. A greenhouse experiment was carried out in order to analyze morphological and physiological responses of the two maize cultivars Mikado and Companero to progressive drought or full irrigation (field capacity) as affected by Geohumus. To obtain in depth information on Geohumus-plant interactions, a split root system experiment was conducted as a tool to investigate hydraulic and bio-chemical root-shoot communication of Mikado and Companero under full irrigation, partial rootzone drying, and deficit irrigation. Our results showed a negative correlation between salt concentration and water holding capacity (WHC) of Geohumus due to replacement of water molecules by ions at the polarized sites within the polymer chain (James and Richards 1986). Furthermore, salt types affected the WHC of Geohumus differently; in particular, multivalent ions were stronger impeding Geohumus compared to monovalent ions. Consequently, Geohumus application to sandy soil with base fertilizer application or to compost could not improve soil water content. However, split fertilizer application to sandy soil containing Geohumus led to a significantly improved soil moisture content indicating that timing and amount of fertilizer should be carefully considered under Geohumus application. Furthermore, for field applications the effect of climate needs to be considered, since the WHC of Geohumus increased with increasing temperature. The preferential ion uptake of Geohumus could translate into competition with plant roots for nutrient uptake from soil solution. On the other hand, Geohumus can capture nutrients which might have been lost for plants due to drainage. We found indications of these positive effects since biomass and leaf area of Mikado and Companero maize genotypes were increased compared to soils without Geohumus. Theoretically, polymers could release stored water to plants under drought stress; which in turn could inhibit or delay chemical signaling. However, our results showed increased concentrations of [ABA]leaf and [ABA]xylem of both Mikado and Companero grown in sandy soil with Geohumus in response to drought compared to treatments without Geohumus. This hormonal response was associated with larger leaf area and greater biomass resulting in a higher plant water demand due to its increased transpiration area while Geohumus did not improve soil water content significantly. On the other, hand root/shoot ratio, absolute root length and root biomass were decreased in plants grown with Geohumus. This suggests that plants grown with Geohumus under drought conditions could not extract water from deeper soil layers. The split root experiments showed that the larger leaf area of plants grown with Geohumus in combination with limited moisture content of sandy soil resulted in a stronger chemical root-shoot signal related to water stress. Regardless the increased [ABA]xylem which is associated with a reduction of stomatal conductance, Geohumus application could result in a decreased leaf water potential under partial root zone drying. Mikado grown with and without Geohumus, as a genotype potentially adapted to drought conditions, was able (1) to maintain its water potential under water limited conditions by penetrating roots into deeper soil layers (2) to delay the expression of physiological traits associated with drought, and (3) to maintain its shoot weight in contrast to Companero, a drought sensitive cultivar. The presented results are of relevance for the improvement of our understanding of the impact of abiotic factors such as temperature, salt concentration, and salt types on the WHC of Geohumus and therefore will help to optimize the application of hydro-gels under field conditions. Beneficial traits of plant genotypes grown under Geohumus application were identified, which will be valuable for breeding and applied programs targeting at crop improvement in arid and sub-arid regions and areas vulnerable to climate change.Publication Microbial consortia as inoculants for improvedcrop performance(2020) Bradácová, Klára; Neumann, GünterThe use of microbial consortia products (MCP) based on combinations of different strains of plant growth-promoting microorganisms (PGPM) and frequently also on non-microbial bio-stimulants (BS) with complementary beneficial properties, is discussed as a strategy to increase the efficiency and the flexibility of BS-based crop production strategies under variable environmental conditions. Moreover, MCP application aims at the restoration of plant-beneficial, soil biological processes disturbed by soil degradation and intensive use of agro-chemicals. This PhD thesis was initiated to characterize the modes of action and the potential advantages of a representative commercial MCP formulation over selected single strain PGPM inoculants, with documented effects on plant growth promotion and pathogen suppression. In total, nine pot and field experiments were conducted with three crops (maize, spring wheat, tomato) on seven different soils with three organic and inorganic fertilization regimes. Only in one out of nine experiments conducted in this thesis, clear evidence for superior MCP performance was detectable in a drip-irrigated tomato field experiment conducted under the challenging environmental conditions of the Negev desert in Israel (Bradáčová et al., 2019c). This finding demonstrates that MCP inoculants can exhibit an advantage over single strain inoculants but not as a general feature. Selective interactions with the type and dosage of the selected fertilizers, as well as avoidance of inhibitory effects on root growth during MCP rhizosphere establishment, have been identified as critical factors. A further characterization of the conditions, promoting beneficial plant-MCP interactions is mandatory for a more targeted and reproducible MCP application.Publication Microbial regulation of pesticide degradation coupled to carbon turnover in the detritusphere(2015) Pagel, Holger; Streck, ThiloMany soil functions, such as nutrient cycling or pesticide degradation, are controlled by microorganisms. Dynamics of microbial populations and biogeochemical cycling in soil are largely determined by the availability of carbon (C). The detritusphere is a microbial “hot spot” of C turnover. It is characterized by a concentration gradient of C from litter (high) into the adjacent soil (lower). Therefore, this microhabitat is very well suited to investigate the influence of C availability on microbial turnover. My thesis aimed at the improved understanding of biochemical interactions involved in the degradation of the herbicide 4-chloro-2-methylphenoxyacetic acid (MCPA) coupled to C turnover. In the detritusphere gradients of organic matter turnover from litter into the adjacent soil could be identified. Increased C availability, due to the transport of dissolved organic substances from litter into soil, resulted in the boost of microbial biomass and activity as well as in the acceleration of MCPA degradation. Fungi and bacterial MCPA-degraders benefited most from litter-C input. Accelerated MCPA degradation was accompanied by increased incorporation of MCPA-C into soil organic matter. The experimental results show that the transport of dissolved organic substances from litter regulates C availability, microbial activity and finally MCPA degradation in the detritusphere. In general, litter-derived organic compounds provide energy and resources for microorganisms. The following possible regulation mechanisms were identified: i) Litter might directly supply the co-substrate alpha-ketoglutarate (or surrogates) required for enzymatic oxidation of MCPA by bacterial MCPA degraders. Alternatively it might provide additional energy and resources for production and regeneration of the needed co-substrate. ii) Additional litter-C might alleviate substrate limitation of enzyme production by bacteria and bacterial consortia resulting in an increased activity of specific enzymes attacking MCPA. iii) Litter-derived organic substances might stimulate MCPA degradation via fungal co-metabolism by unspecific extracellular enzymes, either directly by inducing enzyme production, or by supplying primary substrates that provide the energy consumed by co-metabolic MCPA transformation. A new biogeochemical model abstracts these regulation mechanisms in such a way that C availability controls physiological activity, growth, death and maintenance of microbial pools. Based on a global sensitivity analysis, 41% (n=33) of all considered parameters and input values were classified as “very important” and “important”. These mainly include biokinetic parameters and initial values. The calibration of the model allowed to validate the implemented regulation mechanisms of accelerated MCPA degradation. The Pareto-analysis showed that the model structure was adequate and the identified parameter values were reasonable to reproduce the observed dynamics of C and MCPA. The model satisfactorily matched observed abundances of gene-markers of total bacteria and specific MCPA degraders. However, it underestimated the steep increase of fungal ITS fragments, most probably because this gene-marker is only inadequately suited as a measure of fungal biomass. The model simulations indicate that soil fungi primarily benefit from low-quality C, whereas bacterial MCPA-degraders preferentially use high-quality C. According to the simulations, MCPA was predominantly transformed via co-metabolism to high-quality C. Subsequently, this C was primarily assimilated by bacterial MCPA-degraders. The highest turnover of litter-derived C occurred by substrate uptake for microbial growth. Input and microbial turnover of litter-C stimulated MCPA degradation mainly in a soil layer at 0-3 mm distance to litter. As a consequence of this, a concentration gradient of MCPA formed, which triggered the diffusive upward transport of MCPA from deeper soil layers into the detritusphere. The results of the three studies suggest: The detritusphere is a biogeochemical hot spot where microbial dynamics control matter cycling. The integrated use of experiments and mathematical modelling gives detailed insight into matter cycling and dynamics of microorganisms in soil. Microbial communities need to be explicitly considered to understand the regulation of soil functions.Publication Mid-infrared spectroscopy and enzyme activity temperature sensitivities as experimental proxies to reduce parameter uncertainty of soil carbon models(2021) Laub, Moritz; Cadisch, GeorgModels that simulate the dynamics of soil organic carbon (SOC) are crucial to understand the global carbon cycle, but current generation models are subject to major uncertainties due to two model shortcomings. Firstly, their different carbon pools are not connected to measurable SOC fractions. Secondly, there is uncertainty about the response of the different carbon pools to an increasing temperature. The aim of this thesis was thus to link the SOC model pools of the Daisy model to measurable proxies for SOC quality and pool specific temperature sensitivity. In the first study, the drying temperature for soil samples assessed by diffuse reflectance mid infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) was optimized to assure optimal representativeness of aliphatic and aromatic-carboxylate absorption bands as proxies for fast- and slow-cycling SOC pools. Their ratio was termed the DRIFTS stability index (DSI). In the second study, the DSI was used to distinguish fast- and slow-cycling SOC model pools at model initialization. In the third study, model initialization using DSI was performed to infer pool specific temperature sensitivities for the different Daisy carbon pools. Furthermore, it was tested whether the measured temperature sensitivities of different extracellular soil enzymes could be used as proxies for pool specific temperature sensitivity. Using a global collection of soil samples revealed that the absorption of all studied DRIFTS absorption bands increased significantly (p < 0.0001) with increasing drying temperature from 32°C to 105°C. This effect was disproportionally strong for the aliphatic absorption band. Due to the strong interference of the residual soil sample moisture content with the aliphatic absorption band, drying at 105°C and storage in a desiccator prior to measurement would be necessary for representative spectra for model pool initialization. In the following, a combination of medium to long-term bare fallow experiments was used, to test the utility of the DSI for SOC pool initialization. Pool partitioning by the DSI was superior to using a fixed pool partitioning under the assumption that SOC was at steady state. The DSI contained robust information on SOC quality across sites. Therefore, in the majority of cases, the application of the DSI led to significantly lower model errors than the steady state assumption. Furthermore, the application of the DSI in Bayesian calibration led to a reduced parameter uncertainty for the turnover of the slow-cycling SOC pool and the humification efficiency. The 95% credibility interval of the slow-cycling SOM pools’ half-life between 278 and 1095 years suggested faster SOC turnover than earlier studies. The DSI used for SOC model pool initialization was then combined with the lignin-to-nitrogen ratio for litter pool initialization to infer pool specific temperature sensitivities. The simulations of five field studies and laboratory incubations with fallow soil and crop-litter inputs were combined. Based on a clear pool definition, pool specific temperature sensitivities could be inferred by Bayesian calibration. However, differences in temperature sensitivities of the same pools between experiments suggested that carbon stability was not the main driver of temperature sensitivities. Instead, the main difference was found between the laboratory incubations (higher Q10 values up to 3) and the field (lower Q10 values centered around 2). In a second approach, the measured Q10 value of phenoloxidase (1.35) was used as Q10 value of the temperature function of both SOM pools and the slow crop-litter pool while ß glucosidase (1.82) was used for the fast crop litter pool. This improved field simulations by 3 to 10% compared to assuming a standard Q10 of 2 for all pools. Thus, site specific Q10 of different soil enzymes showed potential as proxy for site and pool specific temperature sensitivities. Important state variables that explain the observed Q10 value differences between experiments were identified as physical protection of SOC, substrate availability and environmental stress for microorganisms due to fluctuating state variables in the field. In conclusion, the usefulness of the DSI as an indicator of SOC stability and proxy for pool initialization was demonstrated for several soils in central Europe. In addition, it was shown that pool partitioning proxies can help to infer pool specific temperature sensitivity by Bayesian calibration. However, temperature sensitivity was not mainly a function of carbon stability.Publication Modeling microbial regulation of pesticide turnover in soils(2022) Chavez Rodriguez, Luciana; Streck, ThiloPesticides are widely used for pest control in agriculture. Besides their intended use, their long-term fate in real systems is not well understood. They may persist in soils, thereby altering ecosystem functioning and ultimately affecting human health. Pesticide fate is assessed through dissipation experiments in the laboratory or the field. While field experiments provide a close representation of real systems, they are often costly and can be influenced by many unknown or uncontrollable variables. Laboratory experiments, on the other hand, are cheaper and have good control over the governing variables, but due to simplification, extrapolation of the results to real systems can be limited. Mechanistic models are a powerful tool to connect lab and field data and help us to improve our process understanding. Therefore, I used mechanistic, process-based models to assess key microbial regulations of pesticide degradation. I tested my model hypotheses with two pesticide classes: i) chlorophenoxy herbicides (MCPA (2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid) and 2,4-D (2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid)), and ii) triazines (atrazine (AT)), in an ideal scenario, where bacterial degraders and pesticides are co-localized. This thesis explores some potential controls of pesticide degradation in soils: i) regulated gene expression, ii) mass-transfer process across the bacterial cell membranes, iii) bioenergetic constraints, and iv) environmental factors (soil temperature and moisture). The models presented in this thesis show that including microbial regulations improves predictions of pesticide degradation, compared to conventional models based on Monod kinetics. The gene-centric models achieved a better representation of microbial dynamics and enable us to explore the relationship between functional genes and process rates, and the models that used transition state theory to account for bioenergetic constraints improved the description of degradation at low concentrations. However, the lack of informative data for the validation of model processes hampered model development. Therefore, in the fourth part of this thesis, I used atrazine with its rather complex degradation pathway to apply a prospective optimal design method to find the optimal experimental designs to enable us identifying the degradation pathway present in a given environment. The optimal designs found suggest to prioritize determining metabolites and biomass of specific degraders, which are not typically measured in environmental fate studies. These data will lead to more robust model formulations for risk assessment and decision-making. With this thesis, I revealed important regulations of pesticide degradation in soils that help to improve process understanding and model predictions. I provided simple model formulations, for example the Hill function for gene expression and transition state theory for bioenergetic growth constraints, which can easily be integrated into biogeochemical models. My thesis covers initial but essential steps towards a predictive pesticide degradation model usable for risk assessment and decision-making. I also discuss implication for further research, in particular how mechanistic process-based modeling could be combined with new technologies like omics and machine learning.Publication Multi-objective and multi-variate global sensitivity analysis of the soil-crop model XN-CERES in Southwest Germany(2021) Witte, Irene; Streck, ThiloSoil-crop models enjoy ever-greater popularity as tools to assess the im- pact of environmental changes or management strategies on agricultural production. Soil-crop models are designed to coherently simulate the crop, nitrogen (N) and water dynamics of agricultural fields. However, soil-crop models depend on a vast number of uncertain model inputs, i.e., initial conditions and parameters. To assess the uncertainty in the simulation results (UCSR) and how they can be apportioned among the model inputs of the XN-CERES soil-crop model, an uncertainty and global sensitivity analysis (GSA) was conducted. We applied two different GSA methods, moment-independent and variance-based methods in the sense of the Factor Prioritization and the Factor Fixing setting. The former identifies the key drivers of uncertainty, i.e., which model input, if fixed to its true value, would lead to the greatest reduction of the UCSR. The latter identifies the model inputs that cannot be fixed at any value within their value range without affecting the UCSR. In total we calculated six sensitivity indices (SIs). The overall objective was to assess the cross-sub-model impact of parameters and the overall determinability of the XN-CERES applied on a deep loess soil profile in Southwest Germany. Therefore, we selected 39 parameters and 16 target variables (TGVs) to be included in the GSA. Furthermore, we assessed a weekly time series of the parameter sensitivities. The sub-models were crop, water, nitrogen and flux. In addition, we also compared moment-independent (MI) and variance-based (VB) GSA methods for their suitability for the two settings. The results show that the parameters of the TGVs of the four groups cannot be considered independently. Each group is impacted by the parameters of the other groups. Crop parameters are most important, followed by the Mualem van Genuchten (MvG) parameters. The nitrate (NO3-) content and the matric potential are the two TGVs that are most affected by the inter- action of parameters, especially crop and MvG parameters. However, the model output of these two TGVs is highly skewed and leptokrutic. Therefore, the variance is an unsuitable representation of the UCSR, and the reliability of the variance-based sensitivity indices SIVB is curtailed. Nitrogen group parameters play an overall minor role for the uncertainty of the whole XN-CERES, but nitrification rates can be calibrated on ammonium (NH4+) measurements. Considering the initial conditions shows the high importance of the initial NO3-; content. If it could be fixed, the uncertainty of crop groups’ TGVs, the matric potential and the N content in the soil could be reduced. Hence, multi-year predictions of yield suffer from uncertainty due to the simulated NO3-; content. Temporally resolved parameter show the big dependence between the crop’s development stage and the other 15 TGVs becomes visible. High temporally resolved measurements of the development stage are important to univocally estimate the crop parameters and reduce the uncertainty in the vegetative and generative biomass. Furthermore, potential periods of water and N-limiting situations are assessed, which is helpful for deriving management strategies. In addition, it become clear that measurement campaigns should be conducted at the simulation start and during the vegetation period to have enough information to calibrate the XN-CERES. Regarding the performance of the different GSA methods and the different SIs, we conclude that the sensitivity measure relying on the Kolmogorov-Smirnov metric (betaks) is most stable. It converges quickly and has no issues with highly skewed and leptokrutic model output distributions. The assessments of the first-effect index and the betaks provide information on the additivity of the model and parameters that cannot be fixed without impacting the simulation results. In summary, we could only identify three parameters that have no direct impact on any TGV at any time and are hence not determinable from any measurements of the TGVs considered. Furthermore, we can conclude that the groups’ parameters should not be calibrated independently because they always affect the uncertainty of the selected TGV directly or via interacting. However, no TGV is suitable to calibrate all parameters. Hence, the calibration of the XN-CERES requires measurements of TGVs from each group, even if the modeler is only interested in one specific TGV, e.g., yield. The GSA should be repeated in a drier climate or with restricted rooting depth. The convergence of the values for the Sobol indices remains an issue. Even larger sample sizes, another convergence criteria or graphical inspection cannot alleviate the issue. However, we can conclude that the sub-models of the XN-CERES cannot be considered in- dependently and that the model does what it is designed for: coherently simulating the crop, N and water dynamics with their interactions.Publication Nachhaltigkeitsexzellenz in der Landwirtschaft: Mehr Sichtbarkeit für die versteckten Leuchttürme der Alltagspraxis(2024-09) Gebhardt, Beate; Hellstern, LauraIm Projekt NEAL wurde die Bedeutung von exzellenter Mikro-Nachhaltigkeit und die Rolle von Nachhaltigkeitsawards sowie weiterer unterstützender Instrumente einer nachhaltigen Transformation in der Landwirtschaft untersucht. Die Erkenntnisse des Projektes sollen landwirtschaftlichen Unternehmen, Verbänden sowie weiteren relevanten Akteuren der land¬wirtschaftlichen Wertschöpfungsketten eine Orientierung geben in den Fragen: • Welche Nachhaltigkeitsthemen benötigen in Zukunft ein größeres Augenmerk? • Wie können Landwirt*innen in ihrer Nachhaltigkeitstransformation gefördert werden? • Welche Rolle spielen Nachhaltigkeitsawards in der Nachhaltigkeitstransformation? Für das Forschungsprojekt NEAL wurden dazu (a) 310 Landwirt*innen und 59 landwirtschaftsnahe Verbände in einem bundesweiten Nachhaltigkeits-Crowd-Screening im Frühjahr 2022 online befragt und hierbei insgesamt 236 herausragende, awardwürdige Nachhaltigkeitsaktivitäten identifiziert, die in der Landwirtschaft bereits umgesetzt oder geplant werden. Mittels Awards-Matching und Clustering wurde (b) der webbasierte, interaktive CSR-Award Finder mit über 150 Wettbewerben erstellt und Ende 2022 online gestellt. Der CSR-Award Finder macht die Welt der Awards für Unternehmen übersichtlicher und einfacher zugänglich, insbesondere erleichtert dies den Zugang kleiner Unternehmen und landwirtschaftliche Betriebe. Zentrale Aussagen der Studie lauten: 1. Nachhaltigkeit ist für Landwirt*innen ein relevantes Thema und viele „versteckte“ nachhaltige Tätigkeiten werden auf den befragten Betrieben bereits umgesetzt. 2. Bio-Betriebe zeigen sich als Vorreiter von Nachhaltigkeitsexzellenz in der Landwirtschaft. 3. Bodennutzung, Biodiversität, regionale Wertschöpfung und Tierwohl sind wichtige Bereiche, in denen viele nachhaltigkeitsbezogene Maßnahmen von Landwirt*innen umgesetzt und als besonders hervorgehoben werden. 4. „Blinde Flecken“ in Nachhaltigkeitsansätzen korrespondieren mit Bewertungen der Landwirtschaft.. 5. Leuchttürme der Mikro-Ebene kommen auf der Makro-Ebene kaum an. 6. Eine heterogene und multifunktionale Landwirtschaft benötigt vielfältige, multiple Instrumente zur Förderung von Nachhaltigkeit auf Betriebsebene. 7. Nachhaltigkeitstransformation in der Landwirtschaft benötigt mehr gemeinsame An-strengungen. 8. Nachhaltigkeitsexzellenz in der Landwirtschaft benötigt mehr Mut und Sichtbarkeit. Die Ergebnisse im Projekt NEAL unterstreichen: Ein Ansatz alleine ist nicht ausreichend. Aufgrund der Heterogenität der landwirtschaftlichen Betriebe gilt dies gerade auch für die Landwirtschaft. Sustainable Finance und Awards sind dabei zwei verschiedene Ansätze bzw. Instrumente, die beide als wichtig und unterstützend gelten, um die Nachhaltigkeitstransformation landwirtschaftlicher Systeme und Betriebe voranzubringen. Beiden Ansätzen wird bescheinigt, ein wichtiges Instrument unter vielen zu sein, aber singulär einen eher geringen Hebel zu haben, da nicht alle landwirtschaftlichen Betriebe damit eingebunden werden können oder sich dadurch angesprochen fühlen. Die Ergebnisse im Projekt NEAL zeigen außerdem, Awards sind in die Toolbox der bekannten Instrumente und Anreize zur Stärkung der Nachhaltigkeitstransformation einzubinden. Sie stehen damit neben ökonomischen Anreizen im Markt oder regulativen Anreize, die vom Staat gesetzt werden. Awards setzen am Positiven und an der Sichtbarmachung des Vorbildhaften und Innovativen in der Landwirtschaft an. Sie können damit das verborgene Besondere, die nachhaltigen Aktivitäten und die versteckten Leuchttürme in der Landwirtschaft, nach außen tragen und zum Leuchten bringen, und damit die Nachhaltigkeits-Motivation der Landwirt*innen erheblich steigern.Publication Phosphorus-acquisition strategies of canola, wheat and barley in soil amended with sewage sludges(2019) Faucon, M.-P.; Kandeler, Ellen; Lambers, Hans; Firmin, S.; Michel, E.; Houben, D.; Nobile, CécileCrops have different strategies to acquire poorly-available soil phosphorus (P) which are dependent on their architectural, morphological, and physiological root traits, but their capacity to enhance P acquisition varies with the type of fertilizer applied. The objective of this study was to examine how P-acquisition strategies of three main crops are affected by the application of sewage sludges, compared with a mineral P fertilizer. We carried out a 3-months greenhouse pot experiment and compared the response of P-acquisition traits among wheat, barley and canola in a soil amended with three sludges or a mineral P fertilizer. Results showed that the P-acquisition strategy differed among crops. Compared with canola, wheat and barley had a higher specific root length and a greater root carboxylate release and they acquired as much P from sludge as from mineral P. By contrast, canola shoot P content was greater with sludge than with mineral P. This was attributed to a higher rootreleased acid phosphatase activity which promoted the mineralization of sludge-derived P-organic. This study showed that contrasted P-acquisition strategies of crops allows increased use of renewable P resources by optimizing combinations of crop and the type of P fertilizer applied within the cropping system.Publication Rahmenbedingungen für eine vereinfachte „gabenreduzierte“ N-Düngung zu Winterweizen (Triticum aestivum L.)(2018) Makary, Thomas; Müller, TorstenThe split N-fertilization with CAN in three or four doses was considered a measure to improve the nitrogen supply of winter wheat in the past and still is considered a guarantor for good yield and quality. The split N-fertilization with CAN is also recommended to synchronize and harmonize N-demand of the plants as well as soil N-content. The aim of the current study was to analyze simplified (reduced number of N-servings) CAN strategies to winter wheat and the necessity of split nitrogen servings in order to achieve yield and quality aims. This interest was occasioned by impressive results of experiments on farmers’ fields using simplified N- strategies with CAN. Simplified CAN fertilization strategies are able to produce high grain yield and protein contents with winter wheat when the N-supply is ensured. Therefore, the common split N-servings with CAN are not necessary. Simplified strategies with UAN seem to be possible, but this requires further research on application techniques to reduce NH3 losses. Simplified CAN fertilization strategies were tested based on modern wheat varieties and the high plasticity in the development of the yield compounds. Modern wheat varieties show low harvest-indices which is important to reduce the risk of lodging. Furthermore, these varieties are able to overcome omitted N-servings through remobilization of N in the plants. Suboptimal conditions during the development within one important growing stage can be compensated during later growing stages when the growing conditions are better. These properties in combination with a late first application (BBCH 29/31) of N turned out to be the “gold standard” in our experiments. Reduction processes during the tillering (BBCH 25/27) period when N is applied confirm these findings. In addition, the application date for the heading stages (BBCH 49/51) when temperatures are high and conditions very dry have to be considered. Simplified N-fertilization systems can also be applied on Luvisols if the soils are not long-term fertilized by liquid manure. The positive soil characteristics of these soils and the high soil-borne fertility support the approach with simplified CAN strategies. In this situation, N-leaching into deeper soil layers is not likely as high precipitation rates in a short time would be necessary to cause this. In fact, a long term liquid manure application with high rates is not necessary when simplified CAN treatments are applied. Moreover, high N amounts in soils caused by long term liquid manure applications are a risk for N-losses and environmental pollution. Notwithstanding the above, organic fertilizers like liquid manure show positive effects on the soil chemistry and the physical properties of the soil. It is important to apply a system to better include the N fertilization effect of liquid manure during the vegetation period. Additionally, simplified CAN fertilization reduces the work effort on the farms. Currently, especially for livestock farms, which rely on N-fertilization, simplified CAN treatments are a good alternative to the common practice. Whereupon on shallow or sandy soils the approach with simplified CAN treatments should be restricted since these soils mostly show low water holding capacities and high percolate water rates. Under suboptimal growing conditions with high precipitation rates simplified CAN treatments can be a risk for the environment and the groundwater. Apart from that, the volatile weather conditions are the most important factor for yield and quality outcome. Mild conditions during the early winter lead to prolonged growing of the plants. In spring the number of tillers per m-2 is already determinated. Therefore, a combination of N doses at the beginning of the growing season in order to promote the number of tillers doesn´t yield the aimed results. The properties of modern wheat cultivars, tested soils, weather conditions and constraints of simplified CAN treatments show the complexity of N fertilization of winter wheat. Standard measures like the common split CAN fertilization are neither wrong nor ideal to create high yield and protein contents with a minimum of input. The most important items for a successful wheat production are high knowledge and attention levels for the plants and growing conditions. Combining the fertilizer requirement calculation and the knowledge on the field yield potential, the yield and quality of winter wheat can be optimized with a minimum of input.Publication Soil (chrono-) sequences on marine terraces : pedogenesis in two coastal areas of Basilicata and Agrigent, Southern Italy(2009) Wagner, Stephen; Stahr, KarlThis work contributes to the understanding of the Quaternary history in Mediterranean landscapes in Southern Italy. The time frame of soil formation processes was therefore investigated on two sequences of marine terraces. A central question of this study was whether soil formation reflects progressive terrace ages. Chronofunctions were used to apply relative indices of soil development in different pedostratigraphic levels. The newly developed indices generally show incessant weathering on continuously older terraces and therefore true soil chronosequences. A few terraces may however once have formed a single terrace body which was later separated and uplifted by tectonic activity.Publication Soil microbial assimilation and turnover of carbon depend on resource quality and availability(2017) Müller, Karolin; Kandeler, EllenThe decomposition of soil organic carbon (SOC), which is predominantly performed by soil microorganisms, is an important process in global carbon (C) cycling. Despite the importance of microbial activity to the global C budget, the effects of resource quality and availability on soil microorganisms are little understood. Most of this plant-derived C enters the soil organic C pool via incorporation into soil microorganisms, but the subsequent fate of C is rarely reported. Therefore, soil microbial biogeochemistry is still highly uncertain in earth system models. The study presented in Chapter 5 used a field experiment established in 2009 to investigate C flow at three soil depths over five consecutive years after a C3 to C4 crop exchange. Root-derived C (belowground pathway) was introduced by the cropping of maize plants, whereas shoot-derived C (aboveground pathway) was introduced by application of shoot litter to the soil surface. The proportion of maize-derived C varied between the different soil pools with lower incorporation into SOC and EOC (extractable organic C) and higher incorporation ratios of maize C into microbial groups. Although root-C input was three times higher than shoot-C input, similar relative amounts of maize-C were found in microorganisms. Both root and shoot C were transferred to a depth of 70 cm. At all three depths, fungi utilized the provided maize C to a greater extent than did either Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria. Fungal biomass was labeled with maize-C to 78% after the fifth vegetation period, indicating preferential utilization of litter-derived C by saprotrophic fungi. The second study investigated, in a microcosm experiment, the effects of decreasing resource quality on microorganisms during plant residue decomposition at the soil-litter interface. Reciprocal transplantation of labeled 13C and unlabeled 12C maize litter to the surface of soil cores allowed us to follow C transfer and subsequent C turnover from residues into microbial biomass of fundamental members (bacteria and fungi) of the detritivore food web during three stages of the litter decomposition process. Quality (i.e. age) of the maize litter influenced C incorporation into bacteria and fungi. Labile C from freshly introduced litter was incorporated by both groups of microorganisms, whereas saprotrophic fungi additionally used complex C in the intermediate stage of decomposition. Bacteria responded differentially to the introduced litter; either by turnover of litter C in their phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs) over time, or by storage and/or reuse of previous microbially released C. Saprotrophic fungi, however, showed a distinct litter C turnover in the fungal PLFA. The mean residence time of C in the fungal biomass was 32 to 46 days; the same or shorter time than in bacterial PLFAs. In the third study, presented in Chapter 7, another field experiment was conducted to distinguish herbivore- from detritus-based food chain members over two consecutive years. Three treatments were established: maize as crop plant, maize shoot litter application, and fallow without C input. This provided root-derived C, shoot-derived C, and autochthonous organic matter, respectively, as the main C resource. The altered C supply due to plant removal had less severe effects on the micro-food web structure than expected. In the first growing season, nematode abundance under plant cultivation was similar to that under litter and fallow conditions. After the second harvest, the abundance of detritivore food chain members increased, reflecting the decomposition of root residues. Bacteria and fungi showed a marked resilience to changed C availability. Results of this experiment suggest considerable micro-food web resilience to altered C and nutrient availability, and indicate that organic matter from previous vegetation periods was successfully utilized to overcome C deprivation. In conclusion, this thesis provides new insights into microbially mediated decomposition processes at different time scales and at different soil depths. Stable isotope probing combined with biomarker analysis enabled us to study C fluxes between biotic and soil C pools to separate the contributions of bacteria and fungi to soil C cycling. These results can be used as a basis for an empirical model of C flow through the entire soil food web.Publication Spatial and temporal variations of microorganisms in grassland soils : influences of land-use intensity, plants and soil properties(2019) Boeddinghaus, Runa S.; Kandeler, EllenGrassland ecosystems provide a wide range of services to human societies (Allan et al., 2015) and plants and soil microorganisms have been identified as key drivers of ecosystem functioning (Soliveres et al., 2016). Therefore, understanding soil microbial distributions and processes in agricultural grassland soils is crucial for characterizing these ecosystems and for predicting how they may shift in a changing environment. Yet we are only beginning to understand these complex ecosystems, which account for about 26% of the world’s terrestrial surface (FAOSTATS, 2018), making it especially urgent to gain better insights into the effects of land-use intensity on soil microbial properties and plant-microbe interactions. This thesis was conducted to evaluate the impact land-use intensity has on soil microbial biogeography of grasslands with respect to both spatial patterns and temporal changes in soil microbial abundance, function (in terms of enzyme activities), and community composition. It also investigated the relationships between plants and the spatial and temporal distributions of soil microorganisms. Thereby both, land-use intensity effects and plant-microbe interactions, were assessed in light of ecological niche and neutral theory. This thesis is based on three observational studies conducted on from one to 150 continuously farmed, un-manipulated grassland sites in three regions of Germany within the Biodiversity Exploratories project (DFG priority program 1374). The first study assessed the effects of land-use intensity and physico-chemical soil properties on the spatial biogeography of soil microbial abundance and function in 18 grasslands sites from two of the three regions, sampled at one time point. The second study analyzed spatial and temporal distributions of alpha- and beta-diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in a low land-use intensity grassland with six sampling time points across one season. The third study investigated both legacy and short-term change effects of land-use intensity, soil physico-chemical properties, plant functional traits, and plant biomass properties on temporal changes in soil microbial abundance, function, and community composition in 150 grassland sites across three regions, with particular regard to direct and indirect land-use intensity effects. Although the three studies used different approaches and assessed different soil microbial properties, general patterns were detectable. Abiotic soil properties, namely pH, nitrogen content, texture, and bulk density played fundamental roles for spatial and temporal microbial biogeography. Since these factors were specific and unique for each investigated site, they formed the background based on which other processes occurred. In addition to abiotic soil properties, impacts of land-use intensity and plants were detected, though to various degrees in the three studies. Land-use intensity played a much smaller role than anticipated in the first and third study. No influence on the spatial distribution of soil microbial abundance and function could be detected in the first study. In the third study, short-term changes in and legacy effects of land-use intensity played a minor role with respect to short-term changes in soil microbial abundance, function, and community composition. Where detected, changes in land-use intensity had a direct and negative effect on soil microbial properties in structural equation modelling; i.e., increases in land-use intensity reduced, e.g., soil microbial enzyme activities, while legacy effects of land-use intensity were shown to act both directly and indirectly on soil microbial properties. Thereby indirect legacy effects were mediated via plant functional traits. Only one of the three studies detected minor plant diversity effects on soil microbial properties. Instead, functional properties of the plant communities, i.e., plant functional traits, biomass, and nutritional quality, were significantly related to spatial and temporal distributions of soil microorganisms. Finally, the findings of the three studies suggest that processes related to niche and neutral theory both drive spatial and temporal patterns of soil microbial properties at the investigated plot scale (up to 50 m × 50 m). This thesis concluded that in order to gain deeper insights into the complex functions and processes occurring in grassland ecosystems, a multidisciplinary approach investigating fundamental physico-chemical site characteristics, microbial soil properties, and plants is necessary. The results of the thesis suggest that focus be turned to functional properties of plant and microbial communities, as they are closely intermingled, provide more detailed insights into plant-microbe interactions, and are able to reflect effects of human impacts on grassland soils better than diversity measures.Publication Towards a better understanding of land surface exchange processes over agricultural crop stands(2020) Bohm, Kristina; Streck, ThiloWeather and climate models are useful tools for projecting the influence of global climate change on the regional scale. These models are critically dependent on an accurate representation of soil-plant-atmosphere interactions, which are simulated by Land Surface Models (LSMs). The present PhD thesis was designed to improve the representation of land surface exchange processes of croplands in the Noah-MP land surface model. This thesis aims: a) to elucidate the nature of the energy imbalance over a winter wheat stand and to identify the appropriate post-closure method for the study region Kraichgau, southwest Germany; b) to improve the representation of the green vegetation fraction (GVF) dynamics of croplands in the Noah-MP for a more accurate computation of surface energy and water fluxes; and c) to determine the effect of aggregating different crop types with various shares into a single generic cropland class on the simulation of water and energy exchange between land surface and atmosphere.Publication Towards regionalisation of soils in Northern Thailand and consequences for mapping approaches and upscaling procedures(2008) Schuler, UlrichThe purpose of this study was to identify the key factors of soil formation and distribution in North-western Thailand in order to enable predictive mapping. Further objectives were to investigate different soil mapping approaches, regarding their suitability for specific areas and scales and to assess the potential of local (soil) knowledge for soil mapping and land use planning. In order to cover the essential petrographic inventory of North-western Thailand three different petrographic areas were selected. The investigated topics were petrographic diversity, spatial organisation of soils and variability of their physical and chemical properties, as well as local soil knowledge of farmers in the respective areas. In addition thematic maps were generated comprising geology, WRB soil groups, and different soil properties. Soil mapping was carried out by using four different methods, the intensive mapping approach, maximum likelihood method, randomised grid cell approach, as well as elicitation of local knowledge. The intensive mapping approach comprised transect investigations, investigation points of the randomised grid cell approach, and additional investigation points, which were selected for areas with increased soil and petrographic variability. All maps based on the intensive mapping approach contained the highest sampling point density and maximum amount of information. These maps were used as a reference for the other mapping approaches applied here.Publication TUSEC - Bilingual-Edition : eine Methode zur Bewertung natürlicher und anthropogener Böden (Deutsche Fassung)(2013) Stahr, Karl; Lehmann, Andreas; David, SusanneThe ‘TUSEC-book’ is a manual for soil evaluation in the temperate zone, comprising English and German versions in one volume. New and innovative are the explicit consideration of anthropogenic soils with the TUSEC evaluation and the differentiation of the evaluation system into two evaluation methods for different levels of detail. Both the part describing the detailed method and the part showing the overview method are again divided into chapters with step-by-step descriptions of methods concerning the evaluation of the widely known soil functions. Every one of these chapters is introduced with principal explanations on the respective soil functions and descriptions of the specificities of the method are provided. Thereby, details on the methodological extensions, which are necessary for the evaluation of anthropogenic soils, are highlighted. Whereas the chapters concerning the detailed evaluation method reflect well-tested procedures, only a beta version is available for the overview method.Publication Uptake of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli into the roots of lettuce plants(2020) Eißenberger, Kristina; Schmidt, HerbertWithin the last 10 years, the annual numbers of human infections with enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) in Germany increased by a factor of 2.4. The peak was reached during the large German outbreak in 2011. Intriguingly, the source of the outbreak was supposedly traced back to organic fenugreek sprouts. Moreover, the number of EHEC outbreaks traced back to plant-based foods, e.g. fresh produce, increased also in the United States. This trend poses a serious threat to public health as fresh produce is mostly consumed raw. Also, these observations gave rise to investigate the interactions of plants and human pathogens in more detail especially as fresh produce may be contaminated directly on the field. In the present thesis, the capability of different EHEC strains and an enteroaggregative/enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EAEC/EHEC) strain, to adhere to and to internalize into the roots of different lettuce plants was investigated. These studies conducted within the scope of this dissertation focused on different aspects of the mentioned processes, such as different bacterial strains, the bacterial genetic equipment, and different environmental conditions, such as plant variety, soil type used for plant growth, and the soil microbiota. To mimic the natural conditions as close as possible, plants were grown from unsterile plant seed in unsterile soil under greenhouse conditions. In the first publication, the overall ability of EHEC O157:H7 strain Sakai to adhere to and internalize into the roots of Valerianella locusta, also known as lamb’s lettuce, grown in diluvial sand soil was described. It was demonstrated that EHEC O157:H7 strain Sakai is indeed able to attach to and internalized into the lettuce roots under the conditions tested. Moreover, this paper shed light on potentially important intrinsic bacterial factors, i.e. genes/proteins, which are putatively involved in adherence and/or internalization. Therefore, deletion mutants lacking hcpA and/or iha, were also investigated regarding adherence to and internalization into the lamb’s lettuce roots. Both genes, coding for the major subunit of the hemorrhagic coli pilus HcpA and the adhesin Iha, respectively, are supposed to be associated with adherence and therefore called “adherence factors”. However, deletion mutants lacking one or both of these genes did not show significant differences in root attachment compared to the wild-type strain. Regarding internalization, deletion of either of these genes resulted in significantly lower numbers of internalized bacteria clearly indicating that both of these genes – or the proteins encoded by these genes – play an important role during invasion of EHEC O157:H7 strain Sakai into the roots of lamb’s lettuce. Interestingly, deletion of both genes did not result in further reduction of internalization compared to single deletion mutants. Hence, hcpA and iha encode rather internalization factors than adherence factors. Moreover, internalization does not solely depend on these two factors. The second paper focused on the influence of lettuce varieties and soil type on adherence and internalization of E. coli O104:H4 strain C227/11φcu. In this study, the lettuce varieties Valerianella locusta and Lactuca sativa, also known as lamb’s lettuce and lettuce, respectively, were both grown in two different soil types, diluvial sand (DS) and alluvial loam (AL), to address the impact of plant host and environment on bacterial attachment and invasion into lettuce roots. To approach the latter aspect in more detail, the composition of the soil microbial community was analyzed in parallel by partial 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Adherence to the roots was positively influenced by the soil type as the number of adherent E. coli O104:H4 strain C227/11φcu bacteria significantly rose by a factor of three to four when the plants were grown in DS compared to AL. However, when grown in the same type of soil, no statistically significant differences in attachment were detected between the distinct lettuce varieties. On the other hand, internalization significantly differed predominantly between the two types of lettuce. Internalization into the roots of L. sativa compared V. locusta was found to be increased by a factor of 12 upon growth in DS, and by a factor of 108 when the plants were grown in AL. Moreover, internalization into the roots of L. sativa was five-times higher in AL than in DS. Consequently, the lettuce variety significantly influences to ability of E. coli O104:H4 strain C227/11φcu to internalize into the lettuce roots, while the soil type affected bacterial invasion only at the roots of L. sativa under the conditions tested. Moreover, by microbiota analysis, the inoculated strain was found within the soil microbiota, and this analysis demonstrated that soil type, lettuce variety, and the combination of both result in large differences in the composition of the soil microbiota.