Abstract

Interest in the storage of organic matter in terrestrial ecosystems has identified a need to better understand the accumulation and retention of organic C and N in soil. The proportions of C and N associated with clay and silt particles (i.e., “capacity level”), water-stable macro-aggregates (WSA) (>250 µm), particulate (POM) (>53 µm), and light fraction (LF) organic matter, for the 0- to 10-cm soil depth, were assessed at 14 agricultural experimental sites established on Gleysolic, Podzolic, Luvisolic , and Brunisolic soils in the cool, humid region of eastern Canada. Organic C and N in the clay plus silt particles was at or near the capacity level for soils with clay plus silt content < 40%. For soils with >60% clay plus silt, the degree of saturation was 65–70% indicating a potential for further organic C and N retention. The mean proportion of C and N found in the POM was 22 and 27%, whil e the LF organic matter contained 7 and 5% C and N, respectively. Mean soil WSA content, determined by wet-sieving analysis, was 42% for air-dry soil and 54% for wetted soil, and was significantly (P < 0.05) related to both soil clay plus silt (r = 0.65) and organic C (r = 0.54). Water-stable macro-aggregate C content was proportional to soil organic C (r = 0.96, P < 0.01). At four of the sites, where soil C and N were influenced by management, an increasing level of soil organic C and N was associated with both the clay plus silt particles and the POM fraction until the former was saturated. Once the capacity level was saturated, further organic C and N accumulation was associated with the POM fraction. Although stabilized organic C and N in soil exists as a continuum, both soil particle and particulate fractions provided a practical approach to monitor, quantify and differentiate the storage and retention of C and N in soils of eastern Canada. Key words: Soil organic matter, clay plus silt associated organic C and N, size fractions, particulate organic matter, light fraction organic matter, water-stable macro-aggregates, organic amendments, Canada

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