Effects of returning corn straw and fermented corn straw to fields on the soil organic carbon pools and humus composition
Author:
Zhang YifengORCID, Dou Sen, Ndzelu Batande Sinovuyo, Ma Rui, Zhang Dandan, Zhang Xiaowei, Ye Shufen, Wang Hongrui
Abstract
Abstract. In our previous studies, we filtered out fungus
(Trichoderma reesei) to have the best ability to transform corn straw into a humic-acid-like
substance through laboratory incubation experiments. In order to further
verify our former findings, we set up a 360 d field experiment that
included three treatments applied under equal carbon (C) mass: (i) corn
straw returned to the field (CS), (ii) fermented corn straw treated with
Trichoderma reesei returned to the field (FCS-T), and (iii) blank control treatment (CK). Soil
organic carbon (SOC), soil labile organic C components, soil humus
composition, and the management levels of SOC pools under the three
treatments were analyzed and compared. The results showed that the SOC
content of CS and FCS-T treatments increased by 12.71 % and 18.81 %,
respectively, compared with CK at 360 d. The humic acid carbon (HA-C)
content of the FCS-T treatment was 0.77 g kg−1 higher than in the CS
treatment. Applying FCS-T appeared to promote a significant increase in SOC
content, carbon pool activity index, and carbon pool management index
through the accumulation of HA-C, humin carbon, and easily oxidizable
organic carbon. Applying fermented corn straw treated with Trichoderma reesei (FCS-T) is more
valuable and conducive to increasing soil easily oxidizable organic C (EOC)
and humus C content than direct application of corn straw.
Funder
Innovative Research Group Project of the National Natural Science Foundation of China Jilin Province Key R&D Plan Project
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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