More replenishment than priming loss of soil organic carbon with additional carbon input

Increases in carbon (C) inputs to soil can replenish soil organic C (SOC) through various mechanisms. However, recent studies have suggested that the increased C input can also stimulate the decomposition of old SOC via priming. Whether the loss of old SOC by priming can override C replenishment has...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2018-08, Vol.9 (1)
Hauptverfasser: Liang, Junyi, Zhou, Zhenghu, Huo, Changfu, Shi, Zheng, Cole, James R., Huang, Lei, Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T., Li, Xiaoming, Liu, Bo, Luo, Zhongkui, Penton, C. Ryan, Schuur, Edward A. G., Tiedje, James M., Wang, Ying-Ping, Wu, Liyou, Xia, Jianyang, Zhou, Jizhong, Luo, Yiqi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Increases in carbon (C) inputs to soil can replenish soil organic C (SOC) through various mechanisms. However, recent studies have suggested that the increased C input can also stimulate the decomposition of old SOC via priming. Whether the loss of old SOC by priming can override C replenishment has not been rigorously examined. Here we show, through data–model synthesis, that the magnitude of replenishment is greater than that of priming, resulting in a net increase in SOC by a mean of 32% of the added new C. The magnitude of the net increase in SOC is positively correlated with the nitrogen-to-C ratio of the added substrates. Additionally, model evaluation indicates that a two-pool interactive model is a parsimonious model to represent the SOC decomposition with priming and replenishment. Lastly, our findings suggest that increasing C input to soils likely promote SOC accumulation despite the enhanced decomposition of old C via priming.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-018-05667-7