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The role of clay content and mineral surface area for soil organic carbon storage in an arable toposequence.

Authors :
Schweizer, Steffen A.
Mueller, Carsten W.
Höschen, Carmen
Ivanov, Pavel
Kögel-Knabner, Ingrid
Source :
Biogeochemistry. Dec2021, Vol. 156 Issue 3, p401-420. 20p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Correlations between organic carbon (OC) and fine mineral particles corroborate the important role of the abundance of soil minerals with reactive surfaces to bind and increase the persistence of organic matter (OM). The storage of OM broadly consists of particulate and mineral-associated forms. Correlative studies on the impact of fine mineral soil particles on OM storage mostly combined data from differing sites potentially confounded by other environmental factors. Here, we analyzed OM storage in a soil clay content gradient of 5–37% with similar farm management and mineral composition. Throughout the clay gradient, soils contained 14 mg OC g−1 on average in the bulk soil without showing any systematic increase. Density fractionation revealed that a greater proportion of OC was stored as occluded particulate OM in the high clay soils (18–37% clay). In low clay soils (5–18% clay), the fine mineral-associated fractions had up to two times higher OC contents than high clay soils. Specific surface area measurements revealed that more mineral-associated OM was related to higher OC loading. This suggests that there is a potentially thicker accrual of more OM at the same mineral surface area within fine fractions of the low clay soils. With increasing clay content, OM storage forms contained more particulate OC and mineral-associated OC with a lower surface loading. This implies that fine mineral-associated OC storage in the studied agricultural soils was driven by thicker accrual of OM and decoupled from clay content limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01682563
Volume :
156
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biogeochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153455554
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-021-00850-3