• 3 months ago
Loam Bio August 2
Transcript
00:00So at Loam we do a range of studies across laboratory work, field trialling work and
00:08we work with the best scientists we can.
00:10So in this case we collaborated with Ulema Carrillo to get access to specific expertise
00:16and equipment so that we could look at the carbon isotopes and trace them through the
00:21plant and into the soil.
00:24I'm a soil ecologist by training, I'm also a biogeochemist.
00:28I like to understand how plants and microbes and soil work together to produce the most
00:34complex substance on earth which is soil carbon.
00:38So soil carbon being the greatest storage of carbon on earth, it's really important
00:43to understand how it is built and carbon is a complex continuum of materials that is always
00:51being added to and is always losing materials.
00:55So understanding the ecological interactions that lead to building carbon or losing carbon
01:04and how they balance together, that is my main motivation for a lot of my research.
01:11What we did was we grew plants in growth chambers and we inoculated the plants with individual
01:16fungal isolates and then we grew those plants for four months and continuously labelled
01:23the plants with 13C CO2 labelling.
01:28And with wheat plants we waited to see how the fungi were helping the plant fix carbon
01:36or not and bring it from the atmosphere to the soil and so then after the plants grew
01:41when this happened we used stable isotope approaches to be able to understand the origin
01:47of the carbon and then we also combined that with a lot of approaches to assess the different
01:52pools that carbon can be stored in.
01:55And we also were very interested in which were the characteristics, and we measured
01:59a lot of them, that these fungi had that could be explaining our observations for the soil
02:07carbon pools and its dynamics.
02:10As a fungal ecologist I found it really interesting how different these fungal isolates were from
02:15each other.
02:17They grew really differently, even on a petri dish, some of them grew quickly, some of them
02:22grew slowly, and then when we added them to soil they had different ways in which they
02:27interacted with the plants and they had different ways in which they interacted with the soil
02:31itself.
02:32So ultimately soil carbon drives soil health.
02:36If you're increasing soil carbon you're increasing the potential of the soil to hold water, to
02:41retain nutrients, to make those nutrients available to plants and ultimately to increase
02:46crop productivity.
02:47So an exciting result from this study was seeing up to 9.4% higher soil carbon and what's
02:54most interesting is that there were 20% more resistant carbon.
02:59So that means that as carbon's increased it's more stable to being lost over time.

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