4.7 Article

Responses of microbial activity to carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus additions in forest mineral soils differing in organic carbon content

Journal

BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS
Volume 57, Issue 4, Pages 513-521

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00374-021-01545-5

Keywords

Labile C input gradient; Picea abies; Nutrients; Deep soil; Soil respiration; Sugarcane sucrose

Categories

Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation [17-08717S]
  2. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic -MEYS [LM2015075, EF16_013/0001782]

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The study found that labile C inputs had a larger effect on decomposition and priming effect in low-SOC soils, while N and P inputs had greater effects in high-SOC soils.
Labile C input to the soil can cause the priming effect (PE) that in turn changes the soil organic C (SOC) content. However, little information is available to predict the magnitude of the PE in different soils, especially under concurrent changes in nutrient inputs. We took advantage of a natural gradient in labile C input in the surroundings of wood ant nests in a temperate coniferous forest which arises through the long-term effects of wood ant foraging on the inputs of honeydew to soil. We collected soils from the surface mineral horizon (high-SOC content) (A horizon) and the subsoil mineral horizon (low-SOC content) (B horizon) at 4 m (low labile C input and higher SOC content) and 70 m (high labile C input and lower SOC content) from four nests. In a 6-month laboratory microcosm experiment, we monitored microbial activity and PE as affected by no nutrient addition (control) or fortnightly additions of labile C alone or in combination with N and/or P (C, CN, CP, CNP). Microbial activity and PE after C addition increased more at 70 m than at 4 m in the B horizon, that is, were higher with a lower SOC content. However, microbial activity and PE in the B horizon were not affected by additions of N and/or P with C. In the A horizon, microbial activity and PE were lower after combined CN addition but increased by combined CP addition relative to C addition alone. In conclusion, labile C inputs had a larger effect on decomposition and PE in low-SOC than high-SOC soils, whereas N and P inputs had greater effects in high-SOC soils than in low-SOC soils. This suggests that low-SOC soils such as those subjected to a high long-term labile C input or those from the subsoil mineral horizon might be more susceptible to increase microbial activity in relation to changes in labile C inputs but less susceptible in relation to changes in N and P inputs relative to high-SOC soils.

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