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Microbial community abundance and structure are determinants of soil organic matter mineralisation in the presence of labile carbon
Authors:Jordi Garcia-Pausas  Eric Paterson
Affiliation:a Centre Tecnològic Forestal de Catalunya (CTFC), Ctra. St. Llorenç de Morunys, Km 2, 25280 Solsona, Catalonia, Spain
b Fundación Centro de Estudios Ambientales del Mediterráneo (CEAM), Charles Darwin 14, Parc Tecnològic, 46980 Paterna, Spain
c The James Hutton Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen AB15 8QH, Scotland, UK
Abstract:Altered rates of native soil organic matter (SOM) mineralisation in the presence of labile C substrate (‘priming’), is increasingly recognised as central to the coupling of plant and soil-biological productivity and potentially as a key process mediating the C-balance of soils. However, the mechanisms and controls of SOM-priming are not well understood. In this study we manipulated microbial biomass size and composition (chloroform fumigation) and mineral nutrient availability to investigate controls of SOM-priming. Effects of applied substrate (13C-glucose) on mineralisation of native SOM were quantified by isotopic partitioning of soil respiration. In addition, the respective contributions of SOM-C and substrate-derived C to microbial biomass carbon (MBC) were quantified to account for pool-substitution effects (‘apparent priming’). Phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) profiles of the soils were determined to establish treatment effects on microbial community structure, while the 13C-enrichment of PLFA biomarkers was used to establish pathways of substrate-derived C-flux through the microbial communities. The results indicated that glucose additions increased SOM-mineralisation in all treatments (positive priming). The magnitude of priming was reduced in fumigated soils, concurrent with reduced substrate-derived C-flux through putative SOM-mineralising organisms (fungi and actinomycetes). Nutrient additions reduced the magnitude of positive priming in non-fumigated soils, but did not affect the distribution of substrate-derived C in microbial communities. The results support the view that microbial community composition is a determinant of SOM-mineralisation, with evidence that utilisation of labile substrate by fungal and actinomycete (but not Gram-negative) populations promotes positive SOM-priming.
Keywords:13C-labelling   Microbial community structure   Nutrients   PLFA   Priming effect   Respiration   Soil organic matter mineralisation
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