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Anthropogenic N deposition increases soil organic matter accumulation without altering its biochemical composition
Authors:Donald R. Zak  Zachary B. Freedman  Rima A. Upchurch  Markus Steffens  Ingrid Kögel‐Knabner
Affiliation:1. School of Natural Resources & Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;2. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;3. Lehrstuhl für Bodenkunde, Department für ?kologie und ?kosystemmanagement, Wissenschaftszentrum Weihenstephan für Ern?hrung, Landnutzung und Umwelt, Technische Universit?t München, Freising‐Weihenstephan, Germany
Abstract:Accumulating evidence indicates that future rates of atmospheric N deposition have the potential to increase soil C storage by reducing the decay of plant litter and soil organic matter (SOM). Although the microbial mechanism underlying this response is not well understood, a decline in decay could alter the amount, as well as biochemical composition of SOM. Here, we used size‐density fractionation and solid‐state 13C‐NMR spectroscopy to explore the extent to which declines in microbial decay in a long‐term (ca. 20 yrs.) N deposition experiment have altered the biochemical composition of forest floor, bulk mineral soil, as well as free and occluded particulate organic matter. Significant amounts of organic matter have accumulated in occluded particulate organic matter (~20%; oPOM); however, experimental N deposition had not altered the abundance of carboxyl, aryl, alkyl, or O/N‐alkyl C in forest floor, bulk mineral soil, or any soil fraction. These observations suggest that biochemically equivalent organic matter has accumulated in oPOM at a greater rate under experimental N deposition, relative to the ambient treatment. Although we do not understand the process by which experimental N deposition has fostered the occlusion of organic matter by mineral soil particles, our results highlight the importance of interactions among the products of microbial decay and the chemical and physical properties of silt and clay particles that occlude organic matter from microbial attack. Because oPOM can reside in soils for decades to centuries, organic matter accumulating under future rates of anthropogenic N deposition could remain in soil for long periods of time. If temperate forest soils in the Northern Hemisphere respond like those in our experiment, then unabated deposition of anthropogenic N from the atmosphere has the potential to foster greater soil C storage, especially in fine‐texture forest soils.
Keywords:13C‐NMR  anthropogenic N deposition  particulate organic matter  soil C storage  soil organic matter
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