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Low carbon availability in paleosols nonlinearly attenuates temperature sensitivity of soil organic matter decomposition

Jiao Su, Haiyang Zhang, Xingguo Han, Josep Peñuelas, Ekaterina Filimonenko, Yong Jiang, Yakov Kuzyakov, Cunzheng Wei

2022Global Change Biology36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Temperature sensitivity ( Q 10 ) of soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition is an important parameter in models of the global carbon (C) cycle. Previous studies have suggested that substrate quality controls the intrinsic Q 10 , whereas environmental factors can impose large constraints. For example, physical protection of SOM and its association with minerals attenuate the apparent Q 10 through reducing substrate availability and accessibility ([ S ]). The magnitude of this dampening effect, however, has never been quantified. We simulated theoretical Q 10 changes across a wide range of [ S ] and found that the relationship between Q 10 and the log 10 ‐transformed [ S ] followed a logistic rather than a linear function. Based on the unique Holocene paleosol chronosequence (7 soils from ca. 500 to 6900 years old), we demonstrated that the Q 10 decreased nonlinearly with soil age up to 1150 years, beyond which Q 10 remained stable. Hierarchical partitioning analysis indicated that an integrated C availability index, derived from principal component analysis of DOC content and parameters reflecting physical protection and mineral association, was the main explanatory variable for the nonlinear decrease of Q 10 with soil age. Microbial inoculation and 13 C‐labelled glucose addition showed that low C availability induced by physical protection and minerals association attenuated Q 10 along the chronosequence. A separate soil incubation experiment indicated that Q 10 increased exponentially with activation energy ( E a ) in the modern soil, suggesting that SOM chemical complexity regulates Q 10 only when C availability is high. In conclusion, organic matter availability strongly decreased with soil age, whereas Michelis–Menten kinetics defines the Q 10 response depending on C availability, but Arrhenius equation describes the effects of increasing substrate complexity.

Topics & Concepts

ChronosequenceQ10Soil carbonSoil organic matterOrganic matterEnvironmental scienceSoil scienceEnvironmental chemistryChemistrySoil waterPaleosolBiologyBotanyOrganic chemistryLoessPaleontologyRespirationSoil Carbon and Nitrogen DynamicsGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchIsotope Analysis in Ecology
Low carbon availability in paleosols nonlinearly attenuates temperature sensitivity of soil organic matter decomposition | Litcius