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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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Integrating plant litter quality, soil organic matter stabilization, and the carbon saturation concept

TL;DR: The model builds on the Microbial Efficiency-Matrix Stabilization framework by suggesting the effect of litter quality on SOM stabilization is modulated by the extent of soil C saturation such that high-quality litters are not always stabilized in SOM with greater efficiency than low- quality litters.
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The underappreciated potential of peatlands in global climate change mitigation strategies.

TL;DR: Restoring peatlands is 3.4 times less nitrogen costly and involves a much smaller land area demand than mineral soil carbon sequestration, calling for a stronger consideration of peatland rehabilitation as a mitigation measure.
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Plant growth improvement mediated by nitrate capture in co-composted biochar

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that co-composting considerably promoted biochars’ positive effects, largely by nitrate (nutrient) capture and delivery, and hypothesize that surface ageing plus non-conventional ion-water bonding in micro- and nano-pores promoted nitrate capture in biochar particles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plant Functional Traits: Soil and Ecosystem Services.

TL;DR: This work highlights the links between plant functional traits and soil properties in relation to four major ecosystem processes involved in vital ecosystem services: food production, crop protection, climate change mitigation, and soil and water conservation, aiming towards ecological intensification of sustainable agricultural and soil management.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assay for microbial biomass based on ninhydrin-reactive nitrogen in extracts of fumigated soils.

M. Amato, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the results showed that the products of decomposition of the killed cells contained ninhydrin-rcactive compounds, most of which was organic (amino acids) but with increasing proportions as NH4+-N (up to 42% after 10 days fumigation).
Journal ArticleDOI

Stable soil organic matter: A comparison of C:N:P:S ratios in Australian and other world soils

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of Australian soils were analysed for total C, N, P, organic P (OP) and S, and the ratios were compared with values for soils from numerous locations around the world, hereafter known as the International soils.
Journal ArticleDOI

Icbm: the introductory carbon balance model for exploration of soil carbon balances

TL;DR: In this paper, a two-component model was devised, comprising young and old soil C, two decay constants, and parameters for litter input, "humification", and external influences, which can be used for medium-term predictions of the effects of changed inputs, climate, initial pools, litter quality, etc., on soil carbon pools.
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