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Changes to particulate versus mineral-associated soil carbon after 50 years of litter manipulation in forest and prairie experimental ecosystems

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Title Changes to particulate versus mineral-associated soil carbon after 50 years of litter manipulation in forest and prairie experimental ecosystems
Names Lajtha, Kate (creator)
Townsend, Kimberly L. (creator)
Kramer, Marc G. (creator)
Swanston, Christopher (creator)
Bowden, Richard D. (creator)
Nadelhoffer, Knute (creator)
Date Issued 2014-06 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Springer and can be found at: http://link.springer.com/journal/10533.
Abstract Models of ecosystem carbon (C) balance
generally assume a strong relationship between NPP,
litter inputs, and soil C accumulation, but there is little
direct evidence for such a coupled relationship. Using a
unique 50-year detrital manipulation experiment in a
mixed deciduous forest and in restored prairie grasslands
in Wisconsin, combined with sequential density
fractionation, isotopic analysis, and short-term incubation,
we examined the effects of detrital inputs and
removals on soil C stabilization, destabilization, and
quality. Both forested sites showed greater decline in
bulk soil C content in litter removal plots (55 and 66%)
compared to increases in litter addition plots (27 and
38% increase in surface soils compared to controls). No
accumulation in the mineral fraction C was observed
after 50 years of litter addition of the two forested plots,
thus increases in the light density fraction pool drove
patterns in total C content. Litter removal across both
ecosystem types resulted in a decline in both free light
fraction and mineral C content, with an overall 51%
decline in mineral-associated carbon in the intermediate
(1.85–2.4 g cm⁻³) density pool; isotopic data suggest
that it was preferentially younger C that was lost. In
contrast to results from other, but younger litter
manipulation sites, there was with no evidence of
priming even in soils collected after 28 years of
treatment. In prairie soils, aboveground litter exclusion
had an effect on C levels similar to that of root
exclusion, thus we did not see evidence that root-derived
C is more critical to soil C sequestration. There
was no clear evidence that soil C quality changed in
litter addition plots in the forested sites; δ¹³C and Δ¹⁴C
values, and incubation estimates of labile C were similar
between control and litter addition soils. C quality
appeared to change in litter removal plots; soils with
litter excluded had Δ¹⁴C values indicative of longer mean residence times, δ¹³C values indicative of loss of
fresh plant-derived C, and decreases in all light fraction
C pools, although incubation estimates of labile C did
not change. In prairie soils, δ¹³C values suggest a loss of
recent C4-derived soil C in litter removal plots along
with significant increases in mean residence time,
especially in plots with removal of roots. Our results
suggest surface mineral soils may be vulnerable to
significant C loss in association with disturbance, land
use change, or perhaps even climate change over
century–decadal timescales, and also highlight the need
for longer-term experimental manipulations to study
soil organic matter dynamics.
Genre Article
Topic Carbon sequestration
Identifier Lajtha, K., Townsend, K. L., Kramer, M. G., Swanston, C., Bowden, R. D., & Nadelhoffer, K. (2014). Changes to particulate versus mineral-associated soil carbon after 50 years of litter manipulation in forest and prairie experimental ecosystems. Biogeochemistry, 119(1-3), 341-360. doi:10.1007/s10533-014-9970-5

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