Abstract

Alpine grassland ecosystems are the most important ecosystem type, exhibiting a high sensitivity to anthropogenic nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) inputs into terrestrial ecosystems and significantly affecting the carbon (C) cycle within these ecosystems. However, the effects of N and P additions on soil C stability and the processes of organic C transformation remain unclear. This study measured the soil enzyme activities and oxidizable C fractions over a 9-year period following N and P additions to an alpine meadow in the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau. It included four treatments: control (CK), N addition, P addition, and combined N and P addition (NP), utilizing statistical methods such as analysis of variance (ANOVA), correlation analysis, and redundancy analysis. The findings indicated that NP addition significantly increased the non-labile soil oxidizable C fraction in the topsoil layer. Redundancy and correlation analyses revealed strong associations between the vegetation characteristics, C-cycling enzyme activities, soil-oxidized C fractions, and SOC stability index. These results underscore the role of NP addition in enhancing SOC accumulation and stability in grassland ecosystems, with the soil vegetation properties and C source enzyme activities serving as key regulators of the SOC stability. This study offers valuable insights into predicting the SOC dynamics amid rising N and P availability, thereby elucidating the effect of nutrient addition on soil C-cycling mechanisms.

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