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Frequent carbon input primes decomposition of decadal soil organic matter

Zhou, Jie ; Guillaume, Thomas ; Wen, Yuan ; Blagodatskaya, Evgenia ; Shahbaz, Muhammad LU ; Zeng, Zhaohai ; Peixoto, Leanne ; Zang, Huadong and Kuzyakov, Yakov (2022) In Soil Biology and Biochemistry 175.
Abstract

Soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition in response to global change represents a critical uncertainty in coupled carbon (C) cycle-climate models. Much of this uncertainty arises from our limited mechanistic knowledge of the effects of organic C input frequency on SOM decomposition. Based on a three-source-partitioning isotopic approach (14C glucose addition to soil continuously labeled by C4 plants over 21 years) and literature review of 86 observations, we assessed the priming of fast- and decadal-SOM decomposition after occasional and frequent (every 12 vs 60 days) labile C input in a grassland soil. Frequent glucose input accelerated SOM decomposition over 200 days, but the occasional input reduced this... (More)

Soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition in response to global change represents a critical uncertainty in coupled carbon (C) cycle-climate models. Much of this uncertainty arises from our limited mechanistic knowledge of the effects of organic C input frequency on SOM decomposition. Based on a three-source-partitioning isotopic approach (14C glucose addition to soil continuously labeled by C4 plants over 21 years) and literature review of 86 observations, we assessed the priming of fast- and decadal-SOM decomposition after occasional and frequent (every 12 vs 60 days) labile C input in a grassland soil. Frequent glucose input accelerated SOM decomposition over 200 days, but the occasional input reduced this positive priming by 2.6 times. The positive priming by occasional C input resulted in 139 μg C g−1 soil net C sequestration corresponding to 38% of C input. During the 200 days incubation, the primed fast-cycling C (younger than 21 years) under occasional C addition was 52–94% greater compared with frequent addition. Conversely, the priming of decadal SOM (older than 21 years) by frequent C input was 463 μg C g−1 after the 200 days incubation, which represents 5.3% of the initial decadal-cycling soil C pool. This was 1.5 times higher than by occasional input because of the stronger N mining caused by the continuously high activity of microbial K strategists under frequent C input. Our global scale assessment showed that occasional C input reduces the priming of decadal SOM decomposition by 89–127 Tg per year compared to frequent input and thus, sequestrated an additional 102 Tg C per year. Overall, the vulnerability of decadal SOM to increasing C input frequency thus weakening the C sink of grassland, whilst reduced C input frequency (e.g. by drought) suppresses the SOM priming and reduces the positive feedback of SOM decomposition to global change. This points out the necessity to assess the age of soil C when predicting the consequences of altered soil C input frequency under global change.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
C natural abundance, C input frequency, Decadal C, Priming effect, Soil organic matter
in
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
volume
175
article number
108850
pages
9 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85140099769
ISSN
0038-0717
DOI
10.1016/j.soilbio.2022.108850
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
049c162f-897f-4425-901c-7ce4ba8ee9b3
date added to LUP
2022-12-06 15:52:34
date last changed
2022-12-08 16:02:23
@article{049c162f-897f-4425-901c-7ce4ba8ee9b3,
  abstract     = {{<p>Soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition in response to global change represents a critical uncertainty in coupled carbon (C) cycle-climate models. Much of this uncertainty arises from our limited mechanistic knowledge of the effects of organic C input frequency on SOM decomposition. Based on a three-source-partitioning isotopic approach (<sup>14</sup>C glucose addition to soil continuously labeled by C<sub>4</sub> plants over 21 years) and literature review of 86 observations, we assessed the priming of fast- and decadal-SOM decomposition after occasional and frequent (every 12 vs 60 days) labile C input in a grassland soil. Frequent glucose input accelerated SOM decomposition over 200 days, but the occasional input reduced this positive priming by 2.6 times. The positive priming by occasional C input resulted in 139 μg C g<sup>−1</sup> soil net C sequestration corresponding to 38% of C input. During the 200 days incubation, the primed fast-cycling C (younger than 21 years) under occasional C addition was 52–94% greater compared with frequent addition. Conversely, the priming of decadal SOM (older than 21 years) by frequent C input was 463 μg C g<sup>−1</sup> after the 200 days incubation, which represents 5.3% of the initial decadal-cycling soil C pool. This was 1.5 times higher than by occasional input because of the stronger N mining caused by the continuously high activity of microbial K strategists under frequent C input. Our global scale assessment showed that occasional C input reduces the priming of decadal SOM decomposition by 89–127 Tg per year compared to frequent input and thus, sequestrated an additional 102 Tg C per year. Overall, the vulnerability of decadal SOM to increasing C input frequency thus weakening the C sink of grassland, whilst reduced C input frequency (e.g. by drought) suppresses the SOM priming and reduces the positive feedback of SOM decomposition to global change. This points out the necessity to assess the age of soil C when predicting the consequences of altered soil C input frequency under global change.</p>}},
  author       = {{Zhou, Jie and Guillaume, Thomas and Wen, Yuan and Blagodatskaya, Evgenia and Shahbaz, Muhammad and Zeng, Zhaohai and Peixoto, Leanne and Zang, Huadong and Kuzyakov, Yakov}},
  issn         = {{0038-0717}},
  keywords     = {{C natural abundance; C input frequency; Decadal C; Priming effect; Soil organic matter}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Soil Biology and Biochemistry}},
  title        = {{Frequent carbon input primes decomposition of decadal soil organic matter}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2022.108850}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.soilbio.2022.108850}},
  volume       = {{175}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}