4.7 Article

Metabolising old soil carbon: Simply a matter of simple organic matter?

Journal

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 88, Issue -, Pages 128-136

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2015.05.018

Keywords

Catabolic profiles; Microbial communities; Enzyme activity profiles; Old C; Bare-fallow soils

Categories

Funding

  1. CNRS (INSU) under EC2CO programme (Action Thematique: Cytrix - Vulnerabilite du carbone stable des sols aux changements climatiques)
  2. Swedish Research Council Formas [2012-530]

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Bare fallow soils that have been deprived of fresh carbon inputs for prolonged periods contain mostly old, stable organic carbon. In order to shed light on the nature of this carbon, the functional diversity profiles (MicroResp(TM), Biolog(TM) and enzyme activity spectra) of the microbial communities of long-term bare-fallow soils were analysed and compared with those of the microbial communities from their cultivated counterparts. It was assumed that the catabolic and enzymatic profiles would reflect the type of substrates available to the microbial communities. The catabolic profiles suggested that the microbial communities in the long-term bare-fallow soil were exposed to a less diverse range of substrates and that these substrates tended to be of simpler molecular forms. Both the catabolic and enzyme activity profiles suggested that the microbial communities from the long-term bare-fallow soils were less adapted to using polymers. These results do not fit with the traditional view of old, stable carbon being composed of complex, recalcitrant polymers. Microbial communities from the long-term bare fallow soils tended to preferentially use substrates with higher nominal oxidation states of carbon relative to the substrates used by the microbial communities from the cultivated soils. This suggests that the microbial communities from the long-term bare-fallow soils were better adapted to using readily oxidizable, although energetically less rewarding, substrates. Microbial communities appear to adapt to the deprivation of fresh organic matter by using substrates that require little investment, such as enzyme production. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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