Agronomy (Oct 2021)
Organic Amendments Alter Long-Term Turnover and Stability of Soil Carbon: Perspectives from a Data-Model Integration
Abstract
Organic amendment (OA) additions may profoundly regulate the turnover behaviours of soil organic carbon (SOC). Explicit understanding of such role of OA is crucial for accurately assessing the potential of carbon sequestration in agricultural soils. To explore the effects of OA additions on the detailed SOC stabilization and destabilization processes, we collected SOC measurements from 29 trials with experimental duration ranging from 14 to 85 years across the globe. Using these datasets, we constrained a soil carbon model to analyse SOC turnover and built-up processes as impacted by OA additions. We found that OA generally decreases microbial carbon use efficiency (CUE) and the fraction of inert SOC that is resistant to decomposition (finert), but has divergent effects on the decay rate of humic SOC (khum). Across the sites, there was great variability in the effects of OA on CUE, khum, and finert, which can be largely explained by local soil and climate conditions and the quantity and quality of OA. Long-term simulations suggested that, without considering the effects of OA on CUE, khum, and finert, the effectiveness of OA additions for carbon sequestration could be largely overestimated. Our results suggest that the strong site-specific regulations of OA on SOC dynamics as demonstrated in this study must be properly considered and better constrained by observational data when assessing SOC sequestration in agricultural soils under the management of OA additions.
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