Mineralization and temperature sensitivity of soil organic matter pools of contrasting lability
European Journal of Soil Science 75(1)
Article 2023 English
Authors
AK
Ahmad Khan
FW
Florian Wichern
MU
Maria Uporova
Abstract
2 min read
Understanding the temperature sensitivity (Q 10 ) of soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition is crucial to predict CO 2 emissions and carbon (C) stocks under global warming. This study describes the decomposition and Q 10 of four soil C pools: (1) very labile (glucose addition (GLU), representing root exudates), (2) labile (microbial turnover, MT), (3) potentially labile (primed C pool, PE), and (4) resistant (inherent soil C, RES). The soil (loamy Luvisol) was incubated for 4 and 144 days at five temperatures (0, 10, 20, 30, and 40°C) with or without 14 C‐labeled glucose. The dynamics of CO 2 fluxes were measured during short (0–4 days) and long (5–144 days) term incubations. Glucose was mineralized following a two‐pool exponential function. The half‐life of the decomposition of the GLU pool decreased by 3 times as temperature increased from 10 to 40 °C. The flux of unlabeled CO 2 over 4 days reflects a strong contribution to the apparent priming especially at high temperature, which was due to the accelerated microbial biomass turnover. Accordingly, the CO 2 flux increased during short‐term incubation and was dominated by the decomposition of labile SOM and microbial biomass turnover, whereas during the long‐term incubation, the CO 2 was mainly released from the temperature‐stimulated decomposition of RES pool. The short‐term Q 10 of the soil C pools decreased in the order: GLU (2.1) > MT (1.8) > PE (1.3) ≈ RES (1.6) over a few days (0–4 days), but the Q 10 measured over the long‐term period (144 days) was in the range of 1.2 (PE) to 1.8 (RES) and decreased in the order RES > MT > PE > GLU. In conclusion, CO 2 emissions linearly increased with temperature in all pools over short‐ and long‐term incubation, except for the GLU pool during long‐term incubation. The Q 10 strongly depends on the availability of C pools for microorganisms and decreases over time with the exhaustion of available substances in soil. This needs to be considered when estimating temperature effects on CO 2 emissions and C turnover in soil.
Hui Li, Shan Yang, M. V. Semenov, Fei Yao, Ji Ye, Rencang Bu, Ruiao Ma, Junjie Lin, I. N. Kurganova, Xugao Wang, Ye Deng, И. К. Кравченко, Yong Jiang, Yakov Kuzyakov
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.