Not all soil carbon is created equal: Labile and stable pools under nitrogen input

Author:

Zang Huadong1ORCID,Mehmood Imran23,Kuzyakov Yakov45ORCID,Jia Rong1,Gui Heng6ORCID,Blagodatskaya Evgenia7ORCID,Xu Xingliang89ORCID,Smith Pete10ORCID,Chen Haiqing11,Zeng Zhaohai1ORCID,Fan Mingsheng2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Agronomy and Biotechnology China Agricultural University Beijing China

2. College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, National Academy of Agriculture Green Development China Agricultural University Beijing China

3. Shandong Rainbow Agricultural Technology Co., Ltd. Weifang China

4. Department of Agricultural Soil Science University of Göttingen Göttingen Germany

5. Peoples Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) Moscow Russia

6. Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany Chinese Academy of Science Kunming China

7. Department of Soil Ecology Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research—UFZ Halle (Saale) Germany

8. Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

9. College of Resources and Environment University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

10. Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Aberdeen Aberdeen UK

11. College of Land Science and Technology China Agricultural University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractAnthropogenic activities have raised nitrogen (N) input worldwide with profound implications for soil carbon (C) cycling in ecosystems. The specific impacts of N input on soil organic matter (SOM) pools differing in microbial availability remain debatable. For the first time, we used a much‐improved approach by effectively combining the 13C natural abundance in SOM with 21 years of C3–C4 vegetation conversion and long‐term incubation. This allows to distinguish the impact of N input on SOM pools with various turnover times. We found that N input reduced the mineralization of all SOM pools, with labile pools having greater sensitivity to N than stable ones. The suppression in SOM mineralization was notably higher in the very labile pool (18%–52%) than the labile and stable (11%–47%) and the very stable pool (3%–21%) compared to that in the unfertilized control soil. The very labile C pool made a strong contribution (up to 60%) to total CO2 release and also contributed to 74%–96% of suppressed CO2 with N input. This suppression of SOM mineralization by N was initially attributed to the decreased microbial biomass and soil functions. Over the long‐term, the shift in bacterial community toward Proteobacteria and reduction in functional genes for labile C degradation were the primary drivers. In conclusion, the higher the availability of the SOM pools, the stronger the suppression of their mineralization by N input. Labile SOM pools are highly sensitive to N availability and may hold a greater potential for C sequestration under N input at global scale.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Reference43 articles.

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