TURNER REVIEW No. 4. Co-occurrence of Proteaceae, laterite and related oligotrophic soils: coincidental associations or causative inter-relationships?
J. S. Pate, W. H. Verboom and P. D. Galloway
Australian Journal of Botany 49(5) 529 - 560
Abstract
This communication presents the hypothesis that certain Australian lateritic
and related oligotrophic soils may have been partly derived biotically from
soluble iron-rich complexes generated following secretion of low-molecular
weight organic acids by phosphate-absorbing specialised proteoid (cluster)
roots of proteaceous plants. Subsequent precipitation of the iron is then
pictured as occurring onto the oxide rinds of developing laterite after
consumption of the organic components of the complexes by soil bacteria. The
hypothesis is f irst examined in relation to current theories of origins of
laterites and the extent of the coincidences worldwide in past and present
times between Proteaceae and oligotrophic soil types of lateritic character.
The paper then provides more definitive lines of evidence supporting the
hypothesis, based largely on recent studies by the authors in south-western
Western Australia. This relates to (a) cases of definitive association in
habitats rich in Proteaceae between zones of root proliferation and ferricrete
layers in lateritic soils, (b) proximity in soil profiles between ferric
deposits and current and ancestral root channels, (c) the recovery of
citrate-consuming bacteria from soil profiles and specifically from ferricrete
rinds and horizons accumulating sesquioxide organic matter and (d)
distribution of iron and phosphorus within plant and soil profile components
consistent with ferricrete rinds being generated by rhizosphere-mediated
interactions of plants and microbes under conditions of severely limited
availability of phosphorus. The mode of functioning of proteoid root clusters
is then discussed, especially in relation to exudation of organic acid anions,
uptake of phosphorus and the subsequent fate of organic anions and their metal
ion complexes in the system. An empirically based scheme is presented
indicating flow profiles for phosphorus and iron between soil, ferricrete
rinds and bacterial and plant components. We then discuss possible carbon
costs to proteaceous plant partners when accessing phosphorus under the
nutrient-impoverished conditions typical of heathlands and open woodlands of
Mediterranean-type ecosystems of Western Australia. The paper concludes with a
critical overview of the hypothesis, particularly its implications regarding
possible higher plant: microbial influences shaping soil and landscape
evolution in the regions involved.
Full text doi:10.1071/BT00086
© CSIRO 2001





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