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Determinants of soil organic matter chemistry in maritime temperate forest ecosystems
Authors:Karen Vancampenhout  Bruno De Vos  Hans Van Calster  Peter Buurman
Affiliation:a Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, K.U.Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200E, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium
b Department of Biosciences and Technology, K.H.Kempen University College, Kleinhoefstraat 4, B-2440 Geel, Belgium
c Research Institute for Nature and Forest, Gaverstraat 4, B-9500 Geraardsbergen, Belgium
d Earth System Science, Department of Environmental Sciences, Wageningen University, P.O. Box 47, NL 6700 AA Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:While the influence of climate, vegetation, management and abiotic site factors on total carbon budgets and turn-over is intensively assessed, the influences of these ecosystem properties on the chemical complexity of soil organic matter (SOM) remains poorly understood. This study addresses the chemical composition of NaOH-extracted SOM from maritime temperate forest sites in Flanders (Belgium) by pyrolysis-GC/MS. The studied forests were chosen based on dominant tree species (Pinus sylvestris, Fagus sylvatica, Quercus robur and Populus spp.), soil texture and soil-moisture conditions. Differences in extractable-SOM pyrolysis products were correlated to site variables including dominant tree species, management of the woody biomass, site history, soil properties, total carbon stocks and indicators for microbial activity. Despite of a typical high intercorrelation between these site variables, the influence of the dominant tree species is prominent. The extractable-SOM composition is strongly correlated to litter quality and available nutrients. In nutrient-poor forests with low litter quality, the decomposition of relatively recalcitrant compounds (i.e. short and mid-chain alkanes/alkenes and aromatic compounds) appears hampered, causing a relative accumulation of these compounds in the soil. However, if substrate quality is favorable, no accumulations of recalcitrant compounds were observed, not even under high soil-moisture conditions. Former heathland vegetation still had a profound influence on extractable-SOM chemistry of young pine forests after a minimum of 60 years.
Keywords:Organic carbon   Temperate forests   Pyrolysis-GC/MS   Factor analysis
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