Reduced phosphorus bioavailability in rice paddies intensified by elevated CO2-driven warming
- Authors
- Wang, Yu; Chen, Hao; Su, Weihua; Zhao, Hongmeng; Turner, Benjamin L.; Cai, Chuang; Luo, Yiqi; Penuelas, Josep; Van Groenigen, Kees Jan; Wang, Dongming; Huang, Yuanyuan; Jiang, Mingkai; Wang, Lei; Wang, Shenqiang; Zhu, Yong-Guan; Shen, Renfang; Zhang, Jiabao; Zhu, Chunwu
- Issue Date
- Feb-2026
- Publisher
- Nature Publishing Group
- Citation
- Nature Geoscience
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Nature Geoscience
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/82400
- DOI
- 10.1038/s41561-026-01917-2
- ISSN
- 1752-0894
1752-0908
- Abstract
- Rising atmospheric CO2 reduces soil phosphorus (P) availability in paddy soils by promoting soil organic P accumulation and crop harvest removal. Atmospheric CO2 and temperatures are increasing simultaneously, yet their interaction with the soil P cycle remains unresolved. Here we report a decade-long free-air CO2 enrichment experiment integrated with in situ warming (+2 degrees C) in a typical paddy-upland rotation system. We find that both elevated CO2 and warming exacerbate P constraints, and that warming alone and in combination with elevated CO2 has a greater impact than elevated CO2 alone. All climate change treatments significantly depleted soil available P (32-54%) and increased the soil C:P ratios (4-30%). Moreover, warming initially accelerated P mineralization but reduced P availability by enhancing Fe-organic carbon complexes and microbial immobilization. These processes, together with increased crop P demand driven by accelerated growth under elevated CO2, exacerbate P depletion. We identify Fe-organic carbon interactions as a previously overlooked mechanism that significantly reduces P bioavailability. Our findings offer a mechanistic framework linking aboveground-belowground C-P coupling with microbially driven Fe-organic matter dynamics, highlighting the urgent need for adaptive nutrient management strategies to sustain rice production under future climate change.
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