4.7 Article

Soil organic matter fractions as early indicators for carbon stock changes under different land-use?

Journal

GEODERMA
Volume 124, Issue 1-2, Pages 143-155

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2004.04.009

Keywords

particulate organic matter; light fraction; land-use change; lignin; NNM; indicators

Categories

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With respect to carbon sequestration in soil, attempts have been made to identify soil organic matter (SOM) fractions that respond more rapidly to changes in land-use than bulk SOM, which could thus serve as early indicators for the overall stock change. We used a combination of physical fractionation (size and density separation) and chemical characterisation (C-to-N ratios, CuO lignin signature, C-13 NMR spectroscopy) to identify sensitive SOM fractions in an agricultural system with sandy dystric cambisols in Bavaria, Germany, 7 years after a land-use change. Land-use types included long-term arable land and grassland, and conversion from one system to the other. Soil carbon and nitrogen contents in 0-3 cm increased from 14 to 39 mg organic carbon g(-1) soil, and from 1.7 to 3.9 mg nitrogen g(-1) soil in the following order: permanent arable, conversion grassland to arable, conversion arable to grassland, and permanent grassland. Wet sieving and ultrasonic dispersion with 22 J ml(-1) released < 5% and 60% to 80%, respectively, of the amount of particles >20 mum relative to complete dispersion. The most sensitive fraction, with respect to land-use, was SOM in the fraction >20 mum not released after sequential wet sieving and ultrasonic dispersion. In contrast, the proportion of free light (wet sieving, density <1.8 g cm(-3)) and occluded light (ultrasonic dispersion with 22 J ml(-1), <1.8 g cm(-3)) particulate organic matter (POM) showed no clear response to land-use. The structural composition of POM indicated its vegetation origin with a selective enrichment of lignin and a loss of O-alkyl C relative to its plant precursors. Decomposition of the occluded light POM was only slightly advanced relative to the free light POM. In mineral fractions <20 mum, SOM was significantly more transformed than in the coarse fractions, as shown by NMR spectroscopy; however, it revealed no specific land-use pattern. An exception to this was the proportion of O-alkyl C in the clay fraction, which increased with SOC content. Ratios of alkyl to O-alkyl C in mineral fractions <20 mum differentiated samples gave a better differentiation of samples than the C-to-N ratios. We conclude that neither free nor occluded light POM are appropriate early indicators for changes in land-use at the investigated sites; however, total SOM, its distribution with depth, and SOM allocated in stable aggregates >20 mum were more sensitive. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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