Geoderma (Nov 2023)
Carbon dynamics as a function of soil moisture following repeated wet-dry cycles in irrigated soils
Abstract
Drying-rewetting cycles are ubiquitous across natural and managed ecosystems. These cycles are known to mobilize carbon (C) in soils producing dramatic pulses in microbial respiration. While many factors contribute to these pulses, the drying-rewetting history of soils affecting carbon emissions remains unclear, especially in irrigated soils where soil moisture fluctuations are more repetitive and/or frequent than natural, seasonally influenced soils. To understand the controls of repeated wet-up and dry down effects on agricultural soils, we used a systems approach to examine the cross section of a furrow irrigated orchard to delineate soil C dynamics. Specifically, we compared two contrasting water regimes, (1) soils temporarily but repeatedly inundated during water delivery (i.e., furrows) and (2) soils at the base of trees (i.e., berms) that only receive water during precipitation events in a semi-arid Mediterranean climate. Overall, our findings show that the heterogeneous landscape of a furrow irrigated field results in two separate systems within the field scale in gaseous release of C as CO2, microbial selectivity of substrates, and mechanisms for C stabilization. By monitoring soil moisture as a function of depth for over two years, our results reveal that furrow soils undergo dramatic wet-dry cycles, while moisture within the berm is relatively constant. We were able to capture the distinct heterogeneity of soil moisture changes within the furrow and berm soils by continuously monitoring CO2 flux throughout water input events in both the wet and dry season. Soil CO2 efflux is suppressed upon irrigation within furrows, while carbon oxidation in berm soils exhibits pore-connectivity limitations that result in lower fluxes when dry. Solid phase soil C speciation determined by C 1s NEXAFS demonstrated C of higher aromaticity remained in furrow soil compared to berm soils. Microbial community analysis shows significantly different communities reside within berm and furrow soils, where furrow soils support more anaerobic metabolisms and spore-formers while berm soils have relatively higher abundance of aerobic microbes capable of degrading larger, more complex C compounds. Our findings show that water regime (periodic inundation vs episodic rainfall) controlling rewetting history can greatly differentiate C respiration within managed soils.