5300-Year-old soil carbon is less primed than young soil organic matter

AbstractSoils harbor more than three times as much carbon (C) as the atmosphere, a large fraction of which (stable organic matter) serves as the most important global C reservoir due to its long residence time. Litter and root inputs bring fresh organic matter (FOM) into the soil and accelerate the turnover of stable C pools, and this phenomenon is termed the “priming effect” (PE). Compared with knowledge about labile soil C pools, very little is known about the vulnerability of stable C to priming. Using two soils that substantially differed in age (500 and 5300 years before present) and in the degree of chemical recalcitrance and physical protection of soil organic matter (SOM), we showed that leaf litter amendment primed 264% more organic C from the young SOM than from the old soil with very stable C. Hierarchical partitioning analysis confirmed that SOM stability, reflected mainly by available C and aggregate protection of SOM, is the most important predictor of leaf litter-induced PE. The addition of complex FOM (i.e., leaf litter) caused a higher bacterial oligotroph/copiotroph (K-/r-strategists) ratio, leading to a PE that was 583% and 126% greater than when simple FOM (i.e., glucose) was added to the young and old soils, respectively. This implies that the PE intensity depends on the chemical similarity between the primer (here FOM) and SOM. Nitrogen (N) mining existed when N and simple FOM were added (i.e., Glucose+N), and N addition raised the leaf litter-induced PE in the old soil that had low N availability, which was well explained by the microbial stoichiometry. In conclusion, the PE induced by FOM inputs strongly decreases with increasing SOM stability. However, the contribution of stable SOM to CO2 efflux cannot be disregarded due to its huge pool size.

Authors
Su Jiao1, 2 , Zhang Haiyang3, 4 , Han Xingguo1, 2 , Lv Ruofei1, 2 , Liu Li1, 2 , Jiang Yong3 , Li Hui5 , Kuzyakov Yakov 6, 7 , Wei Cunzheng1, 8
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Number of issue
1
Language
English
Pages
260-275
Status
Published
Volume
29
Year
2023
Organizations
  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
  • 2 University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
  • 3 College of Life Sciences Hebei University Baoding China
  • 4 Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Penrith New South Wales Australia
  • 5 CAS Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Management Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Shenyang China
  • 6 Department of Soil Science of Temperate Ecosystems, Department of Agricultural Soil Science University of Goettingen Göttingen Germany
  • 7 Peoples Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) Moscow Russia
  • 8 Department of Terrestrial Ecology Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOOKNAW) Wageningen The Netherlands
Date of creation
01.07.2024
Date of change
01.07.2024
Short link
https://repository.rudn.ru/en/records/article/record/107847/
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