Microbially-mediated carbon fluxes vary with landscape position in two erodible, intensively managed agricultural landscapes
Abstract
The balance between loss of C to the atmosphere, and the accumulation of soil organic matter is directly controlled by soil microorganisms. A key driver of microbial activity is soil moisture, but it is unclear how microbial C cycling responds to spatiotemporal shifts in hydrological conditions across a heterogeneous, dynamic landscape. We explored the relationship between soil wetness and biogeochemical cycling along landscape positions in two sloping fields of the Intensively Managed Landscape Critical Zone Observatory (IML-CZO) in Iowa, USA. Soils were collected (0-5 cm, 5-10 cm) from four positions (crest, shoulder, backslope, toeslope) along three transects identified as primary flow paths for runoff and sediment. Samples were incubated for 7 days and analyzed pre- and post-incubation for extractable dissolved organic C (DOC), microbial biomass C (MBC), microbial respiration (C-resp), and inorganic N. At both sites, field moisture, MBC, and CUE 0-5 cm increased from summit to toeslope, whereas CUE 5-10 cm decreased. The steeper and drier of the two fields (field 1) showed corresponding increases in C-resp and NO3, but decreases in DOC, moving downslope; the opposite trends were observed in the less erodible, wetter field 2. Comparing the two toeslopes (0-5 cm), field 2 had a larger labile C (DOC + MBC) pool (3.1 mg C g-1 dry soil) than field 1 (2.7 mg g-1 dry soil), but C-resp of field 1 was lower (53 and 42 ug g-1 dry soil for fields 1 and 2, respectively). No differences in MBC between depths were observed in field 1, but in field 2, MBC 5-10 cm (0.6 and 0.7 mg g-1 dry soil at crest and toeslope, respectively) was always less than MBC 0-5 cm (0.9 mg g-1 dry soil). Our findings indicate that wet, poorly drained soil conditions (such as those in lower landscape positions and at depth) decrease microbial activity and allow DOC to accumulate. Despite the relatively enhanced depositional environment of field 1, the low levels of DOC and high C-resp and MBC indicate more suitable conditions for aerobic respiration.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.B41F2037F
- Keywords:
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- 0414 Biogeochemical cycles;
- processes;
- and modeling;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES;
- 0428 Carbon cycling;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES;
- 0454 Isotopic composition and chemistry;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES;
- 0486 Soils/pedology;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES