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Soil carbon and nitrogen cycling and storage throughout the soil profile in a sweetgum plantation after 11 years of CO2‐enrichment
Authors:Colleen M Iversen  Jason K Keller  Charles T Garten Jr  Richard J Norby
Institution:1. Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, , One Bethel Valley Road, Bldg. 2040 Oak Ridge, TN, 37831‐6301 USA;2. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Chapman University, , One University Drive, Orange, CA 92866, USA
Abstract:Increased partitioning of carbon (C) to fine roots under elevated CO2], especially deep in the soil profile, could alter soil C and nitrogen (N) cycling in forests. After more than 11 years of free‐air CO2 enrichment in a Liquidambar styraciflua L. (sweetgum) plantation in Oak Ridge, TN, USA, greater inputs of fine roots resulted in the incorporation of new C (i.e., C with a depleted δ13C) into root‐derived particulate organic matter (POM) pools to 90‐cm depth. Even though production in the sweetgum stand was limited by soil N availability, soil C and N contents were greater throughout the soil profile under elevated CO2] at the conclusion of the experiment. Greater C inputs from fine‐root detritus under elevated CO2] did not result in increased net N immobilization or C mineralization rates in long‐term laboratory incubations, possibly because microbial biomass was lower in the CO2‐enriched plots. Furthermore, the δ13CO2 of the C mineralized from the incubated soil closely tracked the δ13C of the labile POM pool in the elevated CO2] treatment, especially in shallower soil, and did not indicate significant priming of the decomposition of pre‐experiment soil organic matter (SOM). Although potential C mineralization rates were positively and linearly related to total SOM C content in the top 30 cm of soil, this relationship did not hold in deeper soil. Taken together with an increased mean residence time of C in deeper soil pools, these findings indicate that C inputs from relatively deep roots under elevated CO2] may increase the potential for long‐term soil C storage. However, C in deeper soil is likely to take many years to accrue to a significant fraction of total soil C given relatively smaller root inputs at depth. Expanded representation of biogeochemical cycling throughout the soil profile may improve model projections of future forest responses to rising atmospheric CO2].
Keywords:13C  carbon mineralization  elevated [CO2]  fine roots     Liquidambar styraciflua     mineral‐associated organic matter  net nitrogen mineralization  particulate organic matter  soil carbon  soil depth
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