4.7 Article

Three-source-partitioning of microbial biomass and of CO2 efflux from soil to evaluate mechanisms of priming effects

Journal

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 43, Issue 4, Pages 778-786

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2010.12.011

Keywords

Apparent and real priming effects; Flux and pool partitioning; Carbon sequestration and turnover; Dissolved organic carbon; Isotopic approaches

Categories

Funding

  1. European Commission
  2. DAAD foundation
  3. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

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We propose and successfully applied a new approach for 3-source-partitioning based on a combination of C-14 labeling with C-13 natural abundance. By adding C-14-labeled glucose to soil after C-3 - C-4 vegetation change, we partitioned three C sources in three compartments, namely CO2, microbial biomass and dissolved organic C (DOC). This enabled us to estimate mechanisms and sources of priming effects (PE). Glucose application at low and high rate (GL: 100 and GH: 1000 mu g C g(-1), respectively) caused positive PE both short-term (during 1-3 days) and long-term (3-55 days). Despite a 10-fold difference in the amount of substrate added, the PE observed was larger by a factor of only 1.6 at the high versus low rate of glucose. The real and apparent priming effects were distinguished by partitioning of microbial C for glucose-C and SOM-derived C. As the amount of primed CO2 respired during short-term PE was 40% lower than microbial C, and the contribution of soil C in microbial biomass did not increase, we concluded that such short-term PE was apparent and was mainly caused by accelerated microbial turnover (at GL) and by pool substitution (at GH). Both the amount of primed CO2 C, which was 1.3-2.1 times larger than microbial C. and the increased contribution of soil C in microbial biomass allowed us to consider the long-term PE as being real. The sole source of real PE (GL treatment) was the recent soil organic matter, which is younger than 12-year-old C. The real PE-induced by a glucose amount exceeding microbial biomass (GH) was due to the almost equal contribution of 'recent' (< 12 years) and 'old' (> 12 years) C. Thus, the decomposition of old recalcitrant SOM was induced only by an amount of primer exceeding microbial C. We conclude that combining C-14 labeling with C-13 natural abundance helped disentangle three C sources in CO2, microbial biomass and DOC and evaluate mechanisms and sources of PE. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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