The priming effect of organic matter: a question of microbial competition?

It is generally accepted that the low quality of soil carbon limits the amount of energy available for soil microorganisms, and in turn the rate of soil carbon mineralization. The priming effect, i.e. the increase in soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition rate after fresh organic matter input to so...

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Veröffentlicht in:Soil biology & biochemistry 2003-06, Vol.35 (6), p.837-843
Hauptverfasser: Fontaine, Sébastien, Mariotti, André, Abbadie, Luc
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creator Fontaine, Sébastien
Mariotti, André
Abbadie, Luc
description It is generally accepted that the low quality of soil carbon limits the amount of energy available for soil microorganisms, and in turn the rate of soil carbon mineralization. The priming effect, i.e. the increase in soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition rate after fresh organic matter input to soil, is often supposed to result from a global increase in microbial activity due to the higher availability of energy released from the decomposition of fresh organic matter. Work to date, however, suggests that supply of available energy induces no effect on SOM mineralization. The mechanisms of the priming effect are much more complex than commonly believed. The objective of this review was to build a conceptual model of the priming effect based on the contradictory results available in the literature adopting the concept of nutritional competition. After fresh organic matter input to soils, many specialized microorganisms grow quickly and only decompose the fresh organic matter. We postulated that the priming effect results from the competition for energy and nutrient acquisition between the microorganisms specialized in the decomposition of fresh organic matter and those feeding on polymerised SOM.
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions
Biological and medical sciences
Carbon storage
Chemical, physicochemical, biochemical and biological properties
Energy limitation
Enzyme regulation
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Nutritional competition
Organic matter
Physics, chemistry, biochemistry and biology of agricultural and forest soils
r/K strategy
Soil science
title The priming effect of organic matter: a question of microbial competition?
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