Acid hydrolysis of easily dispersed and microaggregate-derived silt- and clay-sized fractions to isolate resistant soil organic matter


Autoria(s): Plante, Alain F.; Conant, Richard T.; Paul, E. A.; Paustian, Keith; Six, Johan
Data(s)

2006

Resumo

The current paradigm in soil organic matter (SOM) dynamics is that the proportion of biologically resistant SOM will increase when total SOM decreases. Recently, several studies have focused on identifying functional pools of resistant SOM consistent with expected behaviours. Our objective was to combine physical and chemical approaches to isolate and quantify biologically resistant SOM by applying acid hydrolysis treatments to physically isolated silt- and clay-sized soil fractions. Microaggegrate-derived and easily dispersed silt- and clay-sized fractions were isolated from surface soil samples collected from six long-term agricultural experiment sites across North America. These fractions were hydrolysed to quantify the non-hydrolysable fraction, which was hypothesized to represent a functional pool of resistant SOM. Organic C and total N concentrations in the four isolated fractions decreased in the order: native > no-till > conventional-till at all sites. Concentrations of non-hydrolysable C (NHC) and N (NHN) were strongly correlated with initial concentrations, and C hydrolysability was found to be invariant with management treatment. Organic C was less hydrolysable than N, and overall, resistance to acid hydrolysis was greater in the silt-sized fractions compared with the clay-sized fractions. The acid hydrolysis results are inconsistent with the current behaviour of increasing recalcitrance with decreasing SOM content: while %NHN was greater in cultivated soils compared with their native analogues, %NHC did not increase with decreasing total organic C concentrations. The analyses revealed an interaction between biochemical and physical protection mechanisms that acts to preserve SOM in fine mineral fractions, but the inconsistency of the pool size with expected behaviour remains to be fully explained.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/37771/

Publicador

Blackwell Publishing

Relação

DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2389.2006.00792.x

Plante, Alain F., Conant, Richard T., Paul, E. A., Paustian, Keith, & Six, Johan (2006) Acid hydrolysis of easily dispersed and microaggregate-derived silt- and clay-sized fractions to isolate resistant soil organic matter. European Journal Of Soil Science, 57(4), pp. 456-467.

Direitos

Copyright 2006 British Society of Soil Science

Fonte

Institute for Sustainable Resources

Palavras-Chave #050100 ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS #050300 SOIL SCIENCES #microaggregate-derived silt #clay-sized fractions
Tipo

Journal Article