Abstract

Grasslands extend across a variety of topographies including non-flat hilly areas with varied soil texture and moisture that can mediate soil biogeochemical cycling of carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P). In this study we examined soil organic C, total N and P pools (both inorganic and organic), as well as gross N mineralisation (GNM, as a measure of microbial activity and N dynamics) and microbial C, N and P in winter and spring along a grassland hillslope. Our results showed that variation in soil clay and associated soil moisture were the most important mediators affecting C and N dynamics along the grassland elevational gradient. Total organic C pools were highest where the clay content was highest, likely because of the sorption capacity of clay stabilising organic matter against microbial decomposition. Likewise, the variation in soil organic N pools along the hillslope was mostly controlled by clay and soil moisture effects on microbial stabilisation of organic N. Furthermore, microbial C, N and GNM increased with increased soil moisture, suggesting that microbial activity was limited by soil moisture. In contrast, soil P pools were not related to clay and soil moisture, while soil organic P was decoupled from soil organic C and N pools along the hillslope. Possibly, differences in microbial stabilisation and mineralisation pathways (oxidation for C and N, hydrolysis for P), microbial homeostatic regulation of C, N and P, and P fixation resulted in a decoupling of P from C and N cycling in this grassland. We conclude that variation in clay and associated soil moisture along grassland hillslopes can have important but non-unidirectional effects on soil C, N and P cycling.

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