Abstract

Soil organic carbon (SOC) plays an important role in regulating global climate change, carbon and nutrient cycling in soils, and soil moisture. Organic matter (OM) additions to soils can affect the rate at which SOC is mineralized by microbes, with potentially important effects on SOC stocks. Understanding how pyrogenic organic matter (PyOM) affects the cycling of native SOC (nSOC) and the soil microbes responsible for these effects is important for fire-affected ecosystems as well as for biochar-amended systems. We used an incubation trial with five different soils from National Ecological Observatory Network sites across the US and 13C-labelled 350°C corn stover PyOM and fresh corn stover OM to trace nSOC-derived CO2 emissions with and without PyOM and OM amendments. We used high-throughput sequencing of rRNA genes to characterize bacterial, archaeal, and fungal communities and their response to PyOM and OM in soils that were previously stored at -80°C. We found that the effects of amendments on nSOC-derived CO2 reflected the unamended soil C status, where relative increases in C mineralization were greatest in low-C soils. OM additions produced much greater effects on nSOC-CO2 emissions than PyOM additions. Furthermore, the magnitude of microbial community composition change mirrored the magnitude of increases in nSOC-CO2, indicating a specific subset of microbes were likely responsible for the observed changes in nSOC mineralization. However, PyOM responders differed across soils and did not necessarily reflect a common "charosphere". Overall, this study suggests that soils that already have low SOC may be particularly vulnerable to short-term increases in SOC loss with OM or PyOM additions.Importance Soil organic matter (SOM) has an important role in global climate change, carbon and nutrient cycling in soils, and soil moisture dynamics. Understanding the processes that affect SOM stocks is important for managing these functions. Recently, understanding how fire-affected organic matter (or "pyrogenic" organic matter (PyOM)) affects existing SOM stocks has become increasingly important, both due to changing fire regimes, and to interest in "biochar" - pyrogenic organic matter that is produced intentionally for carbon management or as an agricultural soil amendment. We found that soils with less SOM were more prone to increased losses with PyOM (and fresh organic matter) additions, and that soil microbial communities changed more in soils that also had greater SOM losses with PyOM additions. This suggests that soils that already have low SOM content may be particularly vulnerable to short-term increases in SOM loss, and that a subset of the soil microbial community is likely responsible for these effects.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE Soil organic matter (SOM) has an important role in global climate change, carbon and nutrient cycling in soils, and soil moisture dynamics

  • The current understanding of mechanisms underlying the interactive effects of pyrogenic organic matter (PyOM) additions on soil organic carbon (SOC) mineralization includes the following observations [19,20,21,22]. (i) In general, when changes in mineralization occur, net increases in native SOC (nSOC) mineralization tend to be limited to the earlier stages of incubations or field studies, while net decreases in nSOC mineralization often emerge later. (ii) It is essential to consider the specific properties of PyOM and the soil to which it is applied in tandem

  • We incubated five contrasting soils with a range of SOC stocks from sites across the United States (Table 1) that had previously been stored at 280°C, adding 13C-labeled corn stover (“OM”), PyOM produced at 350°C from the same corn stover (“PyOM”), or no additions (“soil”)

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE Soil organic matter (SOM) has an important role in global climate change, carbon and nutrient cycling in soils, and soil moisture dynamics. (ii) It is essential to consider the specific properties of PyOM and the soil to which it is applied in tandem Properties such as pH, total nSOC content, nutrient status, and texture or particle size are important determining factors of the net C effects of PyOM additions on nSOC. The above-mentioned factors make it challenging to collectively develop a predictive understanding of interactions between SOC and PyOM mineralization, it is important to design experiments explicitly to test for and quantify the relative importance of specific mechanisms In this spirit, in this study, we sought to investigate short-term increases in SOC mineralization with PyOM amendments. In a C cycling model designed to predict the long-term effects of PyOM on C stocks [23], the assumption is that the dominant mechanism of decreased SOC mineralization is sorption of SOC by Applied and Environmental Microbiology aem.asm.org 2

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