Three source-partitioning of CO2 fluxes based on a dual-isotope approach to investigate interactions between soil organic carbon, glucose and straw
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In: Science of the Total Environment, Vol. 811, 152163, 10.03.2022.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Three source-partitioning of CO2 fluxes based on a dual-isotope approach to investigate interactions between soil organic carbon, glucose and straw
AU - Chen, Zhiyi
AU - Kumar, Amit
AU - Brookes, Philip C.
AU - Kuzyakov, Yakov
AU - Luo, Yu
AU - Xu, Jianming
N1 - Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2022/3/10
Y1 - 2022/3/10
N2 - Inputs of available organic materials into soil alter the decomposition of soil organic matter (SOM), a process called priming effect. Organic carbon (C) inputs in terrestrial ecosystems are common from various sources (e.g. rhizodeposits, plant residues, microbial necromass) simultaneously, but their interactions as well as mutual effects on SOM decomposition are unknown because multisource partitioning of pools and fluxes was not available. A dual-isotope approach (identical materials except for straw being possessed two 13C abundances) was adopted to partition total CO2 emission from three C sources: SOM, glucose and straw. Cumulative CO2 efflux was quantified into straw-derived (558 μg C g−1), glucose-derived (480 μg C g−1) and SOM-derived (58 μg C g−1) CO2 during the first 7 days of incubation. Glucose or straw addition induced positive SOM priming, whereas glucose combined with straw resulted in higher SOC loss than that induced by single addition of glucose or straw after day 7. The Spearman's correlation showed that the interactions between glucose and straw shifted from increased CO2 evolved during their intensive decomposition (days 1 to 3) to mutual constraint on mineralization during the late stage (days 5 to 7). This study provides evidences for the suitability of the dual-isotope approach to partition multiple sources of CO2 fluxes and C pools, and evaluates their individual or mutual contributions to SOM priming, thus, implicating C sequestration in terrestrial ecosystems.
AB - Inputs of available organic materials into soil alter the decomposition of soil organic matter (SOM), a process called priming effect. Organic carbon (C) inputs in terrestrial ecosystems are common from various sources (e.g. rhizodeposits, plant residues, microbial necromass) simultaneously, but their interactions as well as mutual effects on SOM decomposition are unknown because multisource partitioning of pools and fluxes was not available. A dual-isotope approach (identical materials except for straw being possessed two 13C abundances) was adopted to partition total CO2 emission from three C sources: SOM, glucose and straw. Cumulative CO2 efflux was quantified into straw-derived (558 μg C g−1), glucose-derived (480 μg C g−1) and SOM-derived (58 μg C g−1) CO2 during the first 7 days of incubation. Glucose or straw addition induced positive SOM priming, whereas glucose combined with straw resulted in higher SOC loss than that induced by single addition of glucose or straw after day 7. The Spearman's correlation showed that the interactions between glucose and straw shifted from increased CO2 evolved during their intensive decomposition (days 1 to 3) to mutual constraint on mineralization during the late stage (days 5 to 7). This study provides evidences for the suitability of the dual-isotope approach to partition multiple sources of CO2 fluxes and C pools, and evaluates their individual or mutual contributions to SOM priming, thus, implicating C sequestration in terrestrial ecosystems.
KW - Dual-stable isotope labeling
KW - Organic matter decomposition
KW - Soil priming effect
KW - Substrate decomposability
KW - Three sources partitioning
KW - Ecosystems Research
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85121308744&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/22caa78d-02da-3c24-8991-5ed2064d232b/
U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152163
DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152163
M3 - Journal articles
C2 - 34875335
AN - SCOPUS:85121308744
VL - 811
JO - Science of the Total Environment
JF - Science of the Total Environment
SN - 0048-9697
M1 - 152163
ER -