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Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon-nutrient stoichiometry to increase soil carbon sequestration

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TLDR
In this paper, the effect of N, P and S availability on the net humification efficiency (NHE) following incubation of soil with wheaten straw was investigated, showing that inorganic nutrient availability is critical to sequester C into the more stable FF-SOM pool irrespective of soil type and C input.
Abstract
The more stable fine fraction pool of soil organic matter (FF-SOM; <0.4 mm) has more nitrogen, phosphorus and sulphur (N, P, S) per unit of carbon (C) than the plant material from which it originates and has near constant ratios of C:N:P:S. Consequently, we hypothesised that the sequestration of C-rich crop residue material into the FF-SOM pool could be improved by adding supplementary nutrients to the residues based on these ratios. Here we report on the effect of N, P and S availability on the net humification efficiency (NHE), the change in the size of the FF-SOM pool (as estimated by fine fraction C (FF-C)), following incubation of soil with wheaten straw. Four diverse soils were subjected to seven consecutive incubation cycles, with wheaten straw (10 t ha equivalent) added at the beginning of each cycle, with and without inorganic N, P, S addition (5 kg N, 2 kg P and 1.3 kg S per tonne of straw). This nutrient addition doubled the mean NHE in all soils (from 7% to 15%) and when applied at twice the rate increased NHE further (up to 29%) for the two soils that received this treatment. The FF-N, -P and -S levels increased in concert with FF-C levels in all soils in close agreement with published stoichiometric ratios (C:N:P:S = 10,000:833:200:143). Microbial biomass-C (MB-C) levels were estimated during one incubation cycle and found to increase in parallel with FF-C from 448 μg MB-C g soil (no nutrient addition) to 727 μg MB-C g soil (plus nutrients) and 947 μg MB-C g soil (plus 2× nutrients). There was a significant relationship between MB-C and the change in FF-C during that incubation cycle, providing evidence of a close relationship between the microbial biomass and FF-SOM formation. The two to four-fold increases in NHE achieved with nutrient addition demonstrated that inorganic nutrient availability is critical to sequester C into the more stable FF-SOM pool irrespective of soil type and C input. This has important implications for strategies to build soil fertility or mitigate climate change via increased soil organic C, as the availability and value of these nutrients must be considered.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of soil organic carbon losses and counter approaches from organic materials in black soils of northeastern China

TL;DR: In this article, the RothC model was used to simulate carbon stocks and the straw retention factor was adjusted in order to evaluate strategies for improving carbon sequestration in the northeast plain of China.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response of microbial biomass and CO 2 -C loss to wetting patterns are temperature dependent in a semi-arid soil

TL;DR: Smaller more frequent summer rainfall may decrease CO2 emissions compared to infrequent larger events; and enhance microbial C use efficiency where sufficient background soil organic matter and nutrients are available.
Book ChapterDOI

Climate Change and Agriculture

TL;DR: In this article, the use efficiency of inputs must be improved to reduce emissions in order to advance food security by adopting a climate-smart agriculture and making it integral to any agenda to address global issues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accurate measurement of resistant soil organic matter and its stoichiometry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the efficacy of removing inorganic nutrients with different washing procedures (0.1 or 0.5 m hydrochloric acid solution) and showed that washing soil with dilute acid can remove excess organic nutrients, but it also removes organic carbon.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An extraction method for measuring soil microbial biomass c

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of fumigation on organic C extractable by 0.5 m K2SO4 were examined in a contrasting range of soils and it was shown that both ATP and organic C rendered decomposable by CHCl3 came from the soil microbial biomass.
Book

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an analysis of organic matter in soil using NMR Spectroscopy and analytical pyrolysis, showing that organic matter is composed of nitrogen and ammonium.
BookDOI

Soil Sampling and Methods of Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a set of methods for soil sampling and analysis, such as: N.H.Hendershot, H.M.Hettiarachchi, C.C.De Freitas Arbuscular Mycorrhiza, Y.K.Soon and W.J.
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