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Physical and chemical protection in hierarchical soil aggregates regulates soil carbon and nitrogen recovery in restored perennial grasslands

Authors :
O'Brien, Sarah L.
Jastrow, Julie D.
Source :
Soil Biology & Biochemistry. Jun2013, Vol. 61, p1-13. 13p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Abstract: Stabilization offered by physicochemical protection in hierarchical soil aggregates is critical for building and maintaining soil C and N stocks. However, it is unclear if complex stabilization mechanisms can completely recover when native plant communities are re-established on soils depleted of C and N by agriculture. We isolated particulate organic matter (POM) and silt- and clay-sized fractions from four structurally defined locations within soil collected from an agricultural field, prairies restored for 3–33 years, and a never-cultivated remnant prairie. We used aggregate hierarchy to define our four soil locations: non-aggregated material, free microaggregates, macroaggregates (excluding encapsulated microaggregates), and microaggregates-within-macroaggregates. We found that the duration of linear soil C and N accumulation differed among aggregate-occluded pools in relation to the combined influences of soil mass redistribution and increases in C and N concentrations. Silt in microaggregates isolated from within macroaggregates contributed the greatest quantities of C and N to whole soil, yet reached steady state C and N contents that were only 59% (C) and 56% (N) of those observed in the remnant prairie soil. Although the C and N contents of most pools were still well below the amounts in the reference remnant prairie, the overall distribution of C among pools was similar to the remnant within 33 years of restoration, suggesting that SOM stabilization mechanisms do largely recover in the first decades after cessation of tillage and restoration of the plant community. Thus, the pools that fell short of pre-cultivation C and N contents within the timespan of the chronosequence might continue to build C and N even though they appeared to be at steady state at the time of sampling, possibly because not enough time has passed at the current input rate or because of lags in SOM transfer among pools. We hypothesize that several “transient steady states” could occur in some SOM pools along the way to an overall whole-soil steady state that could take centuries to achieve. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00380717
Volume :
61
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Soil Biology & Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
86921721
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2013.01.031