AI Article Synopsis

  • Microbial necromass carbon (MNC) is a key component of soil organic carbon (SOC) and plays a crucial role in soil carbon sequestration, but its response to long-term water and nitrogen addition is not well understood.
  • In a nine-year study, it was found that both water and nitrogen additions decreased MNC at various soil depths, with notable reductions of 18.56% in the topsoil and 27.19% in the subsoil under specific nitrogen treatments.
  • Additionally, fungal necromass carbon (FNC) was found to contribute significantly more to SOC than bacterial necromass carbon (BNC), indicating the complex interactions between microbial characteristics and soil properties that influence MNC's distribution across

Article Abstract

Microbial necromass carbon (MNC) is a major source of soil organic carbon (SOC) pool, significantly influencing soil carbon sequestration. The effects of long-term water and nitrogen addition on MNC in soils at different depths, as well as their interactions, remain poorly understood. In this study, we examined the influence of water addition (+51.67 mm), nitrogen addition (25, 50, 100 kg N ha yr), and their interactions on MNC accumulation at different soil depths in temperate grasslands. The addition of water and nitrogen over nine years has been observed to exhibit a decreasing trend in the MNC at different soil depths. Notably, MNC in the topsoil layer (0-10 cm) decreased significantly by 18.56 % under low nitrogen addition treatment, while MNC in the subsoil layer (40-60 cm) declined significantly by 27.19 % under high nitrogen addition treatment. Fungal microbial necromass carbon (FNC) contributed 3.25 times more to SOC than bacterial microbial necromass carbon (BNC). In the 0-10 cm soil layer, MNC is primarily governed by both microbial attributes and the physicochemical properties of the soil, in the 20-40 cm soil layer, the physicochemical properties of the soil predominantly control MNC, in the 40-60 cm layer, microbial characteristics exert a more significant influence on MNC. Collectively, our observations suggest that soil MNC decreased with the addition of water and nitrogen in the 0-60 cm soil slope, which could enable the accurate prediction of global change impacts on the accumulation of soil carbon, thus facilitating the implementation of strategies to augment soil carbon sequestration.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.176825DOI Listing

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