Microbial and mineral interactions decouple litter quality from soil organic matter formation

Elias, Dafydd;Mason, Kelly;Goodall, Tim;Taylor, Ashley;Peacock, Caroline;et.al.
(2024) Nature Communications — Vol. 12, n° 1, p. 10063 (2024)

Files

EliasetalNC2024.pdf
  • Open Access
  • Adobe PDF
  • 1.31 MB

Details

Authors
  • Elias, DafyddUK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
    Author
  • Mason, KellyUK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
    Author
  • Goodall, TimUK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
    Author
  • Taylor, AshleyUK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
    Author
  • Zhao, Pengzhiorcid-logoUCLouvain
    Author
  • Peacock, CarolineUniversity of Leeds
    Author
  • et. al.
Show more
Abstract
Current understanding of soil carbon dynamics suggests that plant litter quality and soil mineralogy control the formation of mineral-associated soil organic carbon (SOC). Due to more efficient microbial anabolism, high-quality litter may produce more microbial residues for stabilisation on mineral surfaces. To test these fundamental concepts, we manipulate soil mineralogy using pristine minerals, characterise microbial communities and use stable isotopes to measure decomposition of low- and high-quality litter and mineral stabilisation of litter-C. We find that high-quality litter leads to less (not more) efficient formation of mineral-associated SOC due to soil microbial community shifts which lower carbon use efficiency. Low-quality litter enhances loss of pre-existing SOC resulting in no effect of litter quality on total mineral-associated SOC. However, mineral-associated SOC formation is primarily controlled by soil mineralogy. These findings refute the hypothesis that high-quality plant litters form mineral-associated SOC most efficiently and advance our understanding of how mineralogy and litter-microbial interactions regulate SOC formation.
Affiliations

Citations

Elias, D., Mason, K., Goodall, T., Taylor, A., Zhao, P., Otero-Fariña, A., Chen, H., Peacock, C., & et al. (2024). Microbial and mineral interactions decouple litter quality from soil organic matter formation. Nature Communications, 12(1), 10063. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54446-0 (Original work published 2024)