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Isotopic evidences for microbiologically mediated and direct C input to soil compounds from three different leaf litters during their decomposition

Authors :
Filippo Terrasi
Antonio D'Onofrio
C. Kramer
Carmine Lubritto
Mauro Rubino
Gerd Gleixner
M. F. Cotrufo
Rubino, M.
Lubritto, Carmine
D'Onofrio, Antonio
Terrasi, Filippo
Kramer, C.
Gleixner, G.
Cotrufo, M. F.
Source :
Environmental Chemistry Letters
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2008.

Abstract

We show the potentiality of coupling together different compound-specific isotopic analyses in a laboratory experiment, where (13)C-depleted leaf litter was incubated on a (13)C-enriched soil. The aim of our study was to identify the soil compounds where the C derived from three different litter species is retained. Three (13)C-depleted leaf litter (Liquidambar styraciflua L., Cercis canadensis L. and Pinus taeda L., delta(13)C(vsPDB) approximately -43 per thousand), differing in their degradability, were incubated on a C4 soil (delta(13)C(vsPDB) approximately -18 per thousand) under laboratory-controlled conditions for 8 months. At harvest, compound-specific isotope analyses were performed on different classes of soil compounds [i.e. phospholipids fatty acids (PLFAs), n-alkanes and soil pyrolysis products]. Linoleic acid (PLFA 18:2omega6,9) was found to be very depleted in (13)C (delta(13)C(vsPDB) approximately from -38 to -42 per thousand) compared to all other PLFAs (delta(13)C(vsPDB) approximately from -14 to -35 per thousand). Because of this, fungi were identified as the first among microbes to use the litter as source of C. Among n-alkanes, long-chain (C27-C31) n-alkanes were the only to have a depleted delta(13)C. This is an indication that not all of the C derived from litter in the soil was transformed by microbes. The depletion in (13)C was also found in different classes of pyrolysis products, suggesting that the litter-derived C is incorporated in less or more chemically stable compounds, even only after 8 months decomposition.

Details

ISSN :
16103661 and 16103653
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Chemistry Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....60035dd6dda231a8f09c122e65b97d6d