Soil warming and nitrogen addition facilitates lignin and microbial residues accrual in temperate agroecosystems

Soil Biology and Biochemistry(2022)

Cited 11|Views15
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Abstract
Both warming and nitrogen (N) addition affect the chemistry and characteristics of soil organic matter (SOM). However, their interactive impacts on molecular compositions and origins (plant- or microbial-derived) in agroecosystems are indeterminate. A nine-year field trial study in Northern China was undertaken to quantify the effects of warming (+2 °C), N addition (315 kg N ha−1 yr−1), and their interaction on SOM content and its composition, using biomarkers (i.e., free lipids, lignin phenols and amino sugars) and 13C NMR. Despite insignificant changes in bulk SOM content, the characteristics (i.e., molecular constituents, lability and source origin) were significantly influenced by warming and/or N addition in surface soil (0–10 cm), but not in the subsurface soil (10–20 cm). The SOM was composed of approximately 18–27% microbial residues with the bulk derived from fungi (up to 4–fold higher than bacteria). Warming alone reduced total free lipids (mainly short-chain lipids, More
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Key words
Biomarkers,Free lipids,Lignin phenols,Amino sugars,Microbial residues,Soil organic matter
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