Similar specific mineralization rates of organic carbon and nitrogen in incubated soils under contrasted arable cropping systems

Type de document
journalArticle
Langue source
Français
Titre français
Similar specific mineralization rates of organic carbon and nitrogen in incubated soils under contrasted arable cropping systems
Titre anglais
Similar specific mineralization rates of organic carbon and nitrogen in incubated soils under contrasted arable cropping systems
Auteur(s)
  • AUTRET Bénédicte
  • GUILLIER Hélène
  • POUTEAU Valérie
  • MARY Bruno
  • CHENU Claire
Editeur(s)
Autre(s)
Id
SNCYMU4R
Version
2716
Date ajout
28 octobre 2020 12:23
Date modification
31 octobre 2020 00:09
Résumé français
No tillage is often thought to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural land by increasing soil carbon storage, because of a reduced mineralization of soil organic carbon (SOC) and nitrogen (SON). Regrettably, most available references on this topic come from laboratory incubations of disrupted soil from superficial soil layer. Here, we compare SOC and SON mineralization rates in the long-term experiment of La Cage (France) under conventional (CON), low input (LI), conservation agriculture (CA) or organic (ORG) management. Disturbed soil samples from the 0−27 cm soil layer of all treatments were laboratory incubated for four months, while undisturbed CON and CA soil cores were incubated to account for tillage effects. Physical disturbance decreased SOC and SON mineralization. Model fitting showed that the size of the C labile pool and the C and N mineralization rates of the slow pool were 1.5–2.3-fold greater in undisturbed soil cores than in disturbed ones, which may be due to a higher abundance of labile SOC (e.g. plant residues) in undisturbed soil cores. All cropping systems exhibited similar specific rate of mineralization, expressed per unit of SOC, SON or microbial biomass C, both for disturbed and undisturbed soils. Similar mineralization in CA and CON undisturbed soil cores may result from the balance between higher amount of labile OM and less favourable soil structure for decomposition in CA. Similar mineralization rates in disturbed soil cores suggest that OM decomposability and environmental conditions for decomposers were similar between cropping systems. Overall, these results confirmed the hypothesis previously made in silico to explain the differences in SOC storage in this experiment (Autret et al., 2016). Our results together with the increased SOC stocks observed in CA and ORG treatments suggest that increased biomass returns to soil or changes in microbial physiology may be the main drivers of SOC storage.
Résumé anglais
No tillage is often thought to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural land by increasing soil carbon storage, because of a reduced mineralization of soil organic carbon (SOC) and nitrogen (SON). Regrettably, most available references on this topic come from laboratory incubations of disrupted soil from superficial soil layer. Here, we compare SOC and SON mineralization rates in the long-term experiment of La Cage (France) under conventional (CON), low input (LI), conservation agriculture (CA) or organic (ORG) management. Disturbed soil samples from the 0−27 cm soil layer of all treatments were laboratory incubated for four months, while undisturbed CON and CA soil cores were incubated to account for tillage effects. Physical disturbance decreased SOC and SON mineralization. Model fitting showed that the size of the C labile pool and the C and N mineralization rates of the slow pool were 1.5–2.3-fold greater in undisturbed soil cores than in disturbed ones, which may be due to a higher abundance of labile SOC ( eg plant residues) in undisturbed soil cores. All cropping systems exhibited similar specific rate of mineralization, expressed per unit of SOC, SON or microbial biomass C, both for disturbed and undisturbed soils. Similar mineralization in CA and CON undisturbed soil cores may result from the balance between higher amount of labile OM and less favorable soil structure for decomposition in CA. Similar mineralization rates in disturbed soil cores suggest that OM decomposability and environmental conditions for decomposers were similar between cropping systems. Overall, these results confirmed the hypothesis previously made in silico to explain the differences in SOC storage in this experiment (Autret et al., 2016). Our results together with the increased SOC stocks observed in CA and ORG treatments suggest that increased biomass returns to soil or changes in microbial physiology may be the main drivers of SOC storage.
Note
None
CRAW tags
  • AB - Modalité bio
  • FREDO biologie et travail du sol
  • FREDO fertilisation
  • labour
WEB tags
  • c and n mineralisation
  • physical protection
  • onservation agriculture
Titre de la publication
Soil and Tillage Research
Volume
204
Pages
104712
Date caractères
October 1, 2020
Date publication
1 octobre 2020
Doi
10.1016/j.still.2020.104712 Le DOI est une URL unique de référencement d'une publication. Il est donc plus fiable et permanent qu'une URL classique
Issn
0167-1987 L’ISSN est un code de 8 chiffres servant à identifier les journaux, revues, magazines, périodiques de toute nature et sur tous supports, papier comme électronique.