Interactive priming effect of labile carbon and crop residues on SOM depends on residue decomposition stage: Three-source partitioning to evaluate mechanisms

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Authors

  • Muhammad Shahbaz
  • Amit Kumar
  • Yakov Kuzyakov
  • Gunnar Börjesson
  • Evgenia Blagodatskaya

Inputs of crop residues and labile C (e.g. root exudates) can affect the decomposition rate of soil organic matter (SOM) through the priming effect (PE). Most previous priming studies describe the addition of single labile or residue C, ignoring the interactions of labile C and fresh or decaying crop residues commonly present in field conditions. Using a dual 13C/14C labelling approach in a 62-day incubation, we investigated the effects of adding labile C (40 μg glucose-C g−1 soil) together with wheat shoot or root residues (3.1 mg C g−1 soil) on SOM priming at three residue decomposition stages: intensive (day-1), reduced (day-9) and stabilised (day-24). To estimate the PE, total soil CO2 efflux and microbial biomass were partitioned for three sources: labile C (14C-glucose), plant residues (13C-labelled) and SOM (unlabelled). Without glucose, roots were decomposed less than shoots but induced 1.4-fold stronger cumulative SOM priming (365 μg C g−1 soil) than shoots. Addition of glucose increased SOM priming, with a stronger effect in the presence of shoot than root residues. Glucose addition at the intensive stage of shoots decomposition slightly increased SOM priming. However, compared with residues alone PE, the addition of glucose during reduced residue decomposition stage, increased SOM priming by 60% (roots) to 104% (shoots). Remarkably, this SOM priming after glucose addition was followed by a decline in residue decomposition and by an increase (up to 50%) in SOM-derived C in microbial biomass. Hence, following glucose addition, microorganisms utilised more SOM rather than feeding on decaying residues during reduced decomposition stage. During stabilised residue decomposition stage, the impact of glucose on SOM priming declined again, while the residue decomposition rate remained unaffected. Furthermore, a large proportion of added glucose (up to 10%) was retained in microbial biomass and its mineralisation rate declined strongly (compared with intensive and reduced decomposition stage). Therefore, the glucose amount was not sufficient to influence microbial activities determining SOM or stabilised residue decomposition rates. Overall, SOM decomposition increased by 1- to 4-fold more than the amount of added glucose C, which resulted in a negative net soil C balance compared with residues alone. Thus, we demonstrated for the first time that 1) the interactive effects of glucose (trace amount) and residues on SOM priming depend on plant residue type (higher under shoots than roots) and 2) stage of residues decomposition (higher SOM priming when labile C was added after the end of intensive decomposition stage of plant residues).

Original languageEnglish
JournalSoil Biology and Biochemistry
Volume126
Pages (from-to)179-190
Number of pages12
ISSN0038-0717
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.11.2018

    Research areas

  • C & C isotopic labelling, Glucose, Microbial activation, Residue quality and decomposition stages, SOM priming
  • Biology
  • Chemistry

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Locus of control
  2. Generation of 3D representative volume elements for heterogeneous materials
  3. Inherent and induced anisotropic finite visco-plasticity with applications to the forming of DC06 sheets
  4. Identity without Membership?
  5. The Bali Convention: flexibility of targets and instruments inevitable
  6. Predator assemblage structure and temporal variability of species richness and abundance in forests of high tree diversity
  7. Moving Around Myanmar
  8. Time matters
  9. y-Randomization and its variants in QSPR/QSAR
  10. New validated liquid chromatographic and chemometrics-assisted UV spectroscopic methods for the determination of two multicomponent cough mixtures in syrup.
  11. Modeling Self-Organization
  12. The dependency of the banks’ assets and liabilities
  13. Payments for ecosystem services – for efficiency and for equity?
  14. R. Michael Allen, Justification and the Gospel: Understanding the Contexts and the Controversies
  15. The Limits of Change
  16. What is a Digital Object?
  17. Mythos "Stunde Null"
  18. Reconstructing Diversity Management and Communication from a Constitutive-Polyphonic Perspective
  19. Groundwater intrusion into leaky sewer systems
  20. Understanding role models for change
  21. Das Inverted Classroom Model (ICM) im Kontext kompetenzorientierter Hochschullehre
  22. A duty-block network approach for an integrated driver rostering problem in public bus transport
  23. Neighbourhood interactions drive overyielding in mixed-species tree communities
  24. Computer-Kriegs-Spiele oder: eine Kultur der Gewalt
  25. Georeferencing System for Maneuvering of Autonomous Truck in Mining Environment
  26. A new didactic approach in Engineering Education for conceptual understanding of Euler's Formula
  27. Datenschutzbedenken in Sozialen Netzen -
  28. Global Tax Governance: What is Wrong With It and How to Fix It by Peter Dietsch and Thomas Rixen (eds). Colchester: ECPR Press, 2016
  29. Good-Practice-Sammlung
  30. Microstructure evolution and texture development during production of homogeneous fine-grained aluminum wire by friction extrusion