4.6 Article

Reducing conditions, reactive metals, and their interactions can explain spatial patterns of surface soil carbon in a humid tropical forest

Journal

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 125, Issue 2, Pages 149-165

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10533-015-0120-5

Keywords

Iron reduction; Poorly-crystalline minerals; Redox; Root biomass; Soil carbon; Soil oxygen

Funding

  1. DOE Office of Science Graduate Fellowship Program - American Recovery and Reinvestment Act [DE-AC05-06OR23100]
  2. A.E.S [CA-B-ECO-7673-MS]
  3. DOE [DE-FOA-0000749]
  4. NSF [EAR-08199072, DEB 0620910]
  5. NSF Luquillo Critical Zone Observatory [EAR-0722476]
  6. USGS Luquillo WEBB program
  7. Division Of Earth Sciences
  8. Directorate For Geosciences [1331841] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Division Of Environmental Biology
  10. Direct For Biological Sciences [1239764] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Humid tropical forests support large stocks of surface soil carbon (C) that exhibit high spatial variability over scales of meters to landscapes (km). Reactive minerals and organo-metal complexes are known to contribute to C accumulation in these ecosystems, although potential interactions with environmental factors such as oxygen (O-2) availability have received much less attention. Reducing conditions can potentially contribute to C accumulation, yet anaerobic metabolic processes such as iron (Fe) reduction can also drive substantial C losses. We tested whether these factors could explain variation in soil C (0-10 and 10-20 cm depths) over multiple spatial scales in the Luquillo Experimental Forest, Puerto Rico, using reduced iron (Fe(II)) concentrations as an index of reducing conditions across sites differing in vegetation, topographic position, and/or climate. Fine root biomass and Fe(II) were the best overall correlates of site (n = 6) mean C concentrations and stocks from 0 to 20 cm depth (r = 0.99 and 0.98, respectively). Litterfall decreased as reducing conditions, total and dead fine root biomass, and soil C increased among sites, suggesting that decomposition rates rather than C inputs regulated soil C content at the landscape scale. Strong relationships between Fe(II) and dead fine root biomass suggest that reducing conditions suppressed particulate organic matter decomposition. The optimal mixed-effects regression model for individual soil samples (n = 149) showed that aluminum (Al) and Fe in citrate/ascorbate and oxalate extractions, Fe(II), fine root biomass, and interactions between Fe(II) and Al explained most of the variation in C concentrations (pseudo R-2 = 0.82). The optimal model of C stocks was similar but did not include fine root biomass (pseudo R-2 = 0.62). In these models, soil C concentrations and stocks increased with citrate/ascorbate-extractable Al and oxalate-extractable Fe. However, soil C decreased with citrate/ascorbate-extractable Fe, an index of Fe susceptible to anaerobic microbial reduction. At the site scale (n = 6), ratios of citrate/ascorbate to oxalate-extractable Fe consistently decreased across a landscape O-2 gradient as C increased. We suggest that the impact of reducing conditions on organic matter decomposition and the presence of organo-metal complexes and C sorption by short-range order Fe and Al contribute to C accumulation, whereas the availability of an Fe pool to sustain anaerobic respiration in soil microsites partially attenuates soil C accumulation in these ecosystems.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available