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Characteristics of differently stabilised soil organic carbon fractions in relation to long-term fertilisation in Brown Earth of Northeast China.

Authors :
Xu, Xiangru
Zhang, Wenju
Xu, Minggang
Li, Shuangyi
An, Tingting
Pei, Jiubo
Xiao, Jing
Xie, Hongtu
Wang, Jingkuan
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Dec2016, Vol. 572, p1101-1110. 10p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Long-term use of artificial fertiliser has a significant impact on soil organic carbon (SOC). We used physical–chemical fractionation methods to assess the impact of long-term (26 years) fertilisation in a maize cropping system developed on Brown Earth in Northeast China. Plot treatments consisted of control (CK); nitrogen (N) fertiliser (N2); low-level organic manure combined with inorganic N and phosphorus (P) fertiliser (M1N1P1); medium-level organic manure combined with inorganic N fertiliser (M2N2); and high-level organic manure combined with inorganic N and P fertiliser (M4N2P1). Our objectives were to (1) determine the contents of and variations in the SOC fractions; (2) explore the relationship between total SOC and its fractions. In treatments involving organic manure (M1N1P1, M2N2, and M4N2P1), total SOC and physically protected microaggregate (μagg) and μagg occluded particulate organic carbon (iPOC) contents increased by 9.9–58.9%, 1.3–34.7%, 29.5–127.9% relative to control, respectively. But there no significant differences ( P > 0.05) were detected for the chemically, physically–chemically, and physically–biochemically protected fractions among the M1N1P1, M2N2, and M4N2P1 treatments. Regression analysis revealed that there was a linear positive correlation between SOC and the unprotected coarse particulate organic carbon (cPOC), physically protected μagg, and iPOC fractions ( P < 0.05). However, physically–chemically, and physically–biochemically protected fractions responded negatively to SOC content. The highest rate of C accumulation among the SOC fractions occurred in the cPOC fraction, which accounted for as much as 32% of C accumulation as total SOC increased, suggesting that cPOC may be the most sensitive fraction to fertiliser application. We found that treatments had no effect on C levels in H-μsilt and NH-μsilt, indicating that the microaggregated silt C-fractions may have reached a steady state in terms of C saturation in the Brown Earth of Northeast China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
572
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119287167
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.08.018