Isotope fractionation and ¹³C enrichment in soil profiles during the decomposition of soil organic matter

The mechanisms behind the ¹³C enrichment of organic matter with increasing soil depth in forests are unclear. To determine if ¹³C discrimination during respiration could contribute to this pattern, we compared δ¹³C signatures of respired CO₂ from sieved mineral soil, litter layer and litterfall with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oecologia 2007-08, Vol.153 (1), p.89-98
Hauptverfasser: Boström, Björn, Comstedt, Daniel, Ekblad, Alf
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The mechanisms behind the ¹³C enrichment of organic matter with increasing soil depth in forests are unclear. To determine if ¹³C discrimination during respiration could contribute to this pattern, we compared δ¹³C signatures of respired CO₂ from sieved mineral soil, litter layer and litterfall with measurements of δ¹³C and δ¹⁵N of mineral soil, litter layer, litterfall, roots and fungal mycelia sampled from a 68-year-old Norway spruce forest stand planted on previously cultivated land. Because the land was subjected to ploughing before establishment of the forest stand, shifts in δ¹³C in the top 20 cm reflect processes that have been active since the beginning of the reforestation process. As ¹³C-depleted organic matter accumulated in the upper soil, a 1.0[per thousand] δ¹³C gradient from -28.5[per thousand] in the litter layer to -27.6[per thousand] at a depth of 2-6 cm was formed. This can be explained by the 1[per thousand] drop in δ¹³C of atmospheric CO₂ since the beginning of reforestation together with the mixing of new C (forest) and old C (farmland). However, the isotopic change of the atmospheric CO₂ explains only a portion of the additional 1.0[per thousand] increase in δ¹³C below a depth of 20 cm. The δ¹³C of the respired CO₂ was similar to that of the organic matter in the upper soil layers but became increasingly ¹³C enriched with depth, up to 2.5[per thousand] relative to the organic matter. We hypothesise that this ¹³C enrichment of the CO₂ as well as the residual increase in δ¹³C of the organic matter below a soil depth of 20 cm results from the increased contribution of ¹³C-enriched microbially derived C with depth. Our results suggest that ¹³C discrimination during microbial respiration does not contribute to the ¹³C enrichment of organic matter in soils. We therefore recommend that these results should be taken into consideration when natural variations in δ¹³C of respired CO₂ are used to separate different components of soil respiration or ecosystem respiration.
ISSN:0029-8549
1432-1939
DOI:10.1007/s00442-007-0700-8