Litcius/Paper detail

Rhizosphere engineering for soil carbon sequestration

Chaoqun Wang, Yakov Kuzyakov

2023Trends in Plant Science106 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The rhizosphere is the central hotspot of water and nutrient uptake by plants, rhizodeposition, microbial activities, and plant-soil-microbial interactions. The plasticity of plants offers possibilities to engineer the rhizosphere to mitigate climate change. We define rhizosphere engineering as targeted manipulation of plants, soil, microorganisms, and management to shift rhizosphere processes for specific aims [e.g., carbon (C) sequestration]. The rhizosphere components can be engineered by agronomic, physical, chemical, biological, and genomic approaches. These approaches increase plant productivity with a special focus on C inputs belowground, increase microbial necromass production, protect organic compounds and necromass by aggregation, and decrease C losses. Finally, we outline multifunctional options for rhizosphere engineering: how to boost C sequestration, increase soil health, and mitigate global change effects.

Topics & Concepts

RhizosphereCarbon sequestrationBiologySoil carbonAgronomyEnvironmental scienceSoil waterEcologyCarbon dioxideBacteriaGeneticsSoil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsLegume Nitrogen Fixing SymbiosisPlant nutrient uptake and metabolism