Microbial respiration, but not biomass, responded linearly to increasing light fraction organic matter input: Consequences for carbon sequestration

微生物呼吸作用(而非生物量)对轻质有机物输入量的增加呈线性响应:对碳固存的影响

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Abstract

Rebuilding 'lost' soil carbon (C) is a priority in mitigating climate change and underpinning key soil functions that support ecosystem services. Microorganisms determine if fresh C input is converted into stable soil organic matter (SOM) or lost as CO(2). Here we quantified if microbial biomass and respiration responded positively to addition of light fraction organic matter (LFOM, representing recent inputs of plant residue) in an infertile semi-arid agricultural soil. Field trial soil with different historical plant residue inputs [soil C content: control (tilled) = 9.6 t C ha(-1) versus tilled + plant residue treatment (tilled + OM) = 18.0 t C ha(-1)] were incubated in the laboratory with a gradient of LFOM equivalent to 0 to 3.8 t C ha(-1) (0 to 500% LFOM). Microbial biomass C significantly declined under increased rates of LFOM addition while microbial respiration increased linearly, leading to a decrease in the microbial C use efficiency. We hypothesise this was due to insufficient nutrients to form new microbial biomass as LFOM input increased the ratio of C to nitrogen, phosphorus and sulphur of soil. Increased CO(2) efflux but constrained microbial growth in response to LFOM input demonstrated the difficulty for C storage in this environment.

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