Abstract

Ongoing, multifaceted climate change impacts soil carbon (C) dynamics, with serious possible consequences on terrestrial C cycling. Using a three-year manipulative experiment in abandoned land on the Loess Plateau of China, we examined the effects of in situ warming and altered precipitation (ranging from 50% reduction to 50% increases in precipitation) on different fractions of the soil organic C (SOC), the C pool management index (CPMI), ecoenzymatic stoichiometry, and SOC functional groups. Our results showed that SOC, readily oxidizable organic C, dissolved organic C, particulate organic C, and microbial biomass C exhibited an increasing trend with increasing precipitation, whereas warming had no significant effect. This response pattern also led to an increase in the CPMI with increasing precipitation. The ecoenzymatic vector model indicated that microbial C limitation decreased with increasing precipitation. In addition, the proportion of labile poly-alcoholic C and aliphatic C increased with precipitation gradient, while recalcitrant aromatic C and carboxylic C decreased. The CPMI correlated negatively with microbial C limitation and positively with labile SOC functional groups. Structural equation modeling and relative importance analyses further indicated that microbial C-limitation and labile SOC functional groups are important factors mediating the CPMI but have opposite effects. Overall, these findings considerably advance our understanding of the links between the soil CPMI and both microbial elemental limitations and SOC chemical composition, providing new insight for the accurate prediction of soil C dynamics under changing environments.

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