Title of article :
Molecular C dynamics downstream: The biochemical
decomposition sequence and its impact on soil organic
matter structure and function
Author/Authors :
A. Stuart Grandya، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Jason C. Neff b، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Advances in spectroscopic and other chemical methods have greatly enhanced our ability
to characterize soil organic matter chemistry. As a result, the molecular characteristics of
soil C are now known for a range of ecosystems, soil types, and management intensities.
Placing this knowledge into a broader ecological and management context is difficult,
however, and remains one of the fundamental challenges of soil organic matter research.
Here we present a conceptual model of molecular soil C dynamics to stimulate interdisciplinary
research into the ecological implications of molecular C turnover and its
management- and process-level controls. Our model describes three properties of soil C
dynamics: 1) soil size fractions have unique molecular patterns that reflect varying degrees
of biological and physical control over decomposition; 2) there is a common decomposition
sequence independent of plant inputs or other ecosystem properties; and 3) molecular
decomposition sequences, although consistent, are not uniform and can be altered by
processes that accelerate or slow the microbial transformation of specific molecules. The
consequences of this model include several key points. First, lignin presents a constraint to
decomposition of plant litter and particulate C (N53 μm) but exerts little influence on more
stable mineral-associated soil fractions b53 μm. Second, carbon stabilized onto mineral
fractions has a distinct composition related more to microbially processed organic matter
than to plant-related compounds. Third, disturbances, such as N fertilization and tillage,
which alter decomposition rates, can have “downstream effects”; that is, a disturbance that
directly alters the molecular dynamics of particulate C may have a series of indirect effects
on C stabilization in silt and clay fractions.
Keywords :
Soil organic materDecompositionCarbonPyrolysis-GC/MSDisturbance
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment