Abstract

In order to bridge the gap of knowledge in respect of soil organic matter (SOM) dynamics of post-agricultural Luvisols during restoration, the study focused on alteration processes of functionally different SOM pools, 14C ages, and C turnover rates in a chronosequential approach. The study comprises three Luvisol chronosequences of 37 years (North), 120 years (Middle), and 42 years (South) across a climate gradient of the temperate broad-leaved forests of European Russia. Restoration led to SOM accumulation within both active (free particulate organic matter (POM) and occluded POM and passive (clay fraction) pools, and as a result, in gains of total organic carbon (C). Accumulation of new C was confirmed by increasing ∆14C signatures of occluded POM and clay fractions. After 22 years of restoration, ∆14C signatures progressed from negative to positive values for the occluded POM fraction, whereas they showed a similar development but remained negative for the clay faction. This highlights the fact that the incorporation of new C into the passive pool takes place, but that it occurs at a slower rate compared to that of the active pool. The 14C age of occluded POM fraction declined from 600 to 1200 years before present (BP) in arable sites to about 200 years BP after 22 years of restoration and thereafter. The 14C age of the clay fraction decreased from 1670 to 2660 years BP in arable soils to 750 years BP in 22 year abandoned site, 450–310 years BP in 32–66 year abandoned sites, and 200–370 years BP in near-natural forests. This decline of the 14C age reveals a change of the proportions between old and young C within the passive pool caused by management and the development of an ecosystem towards a steady state. Recovery of C was accompanied by initially increasing and then decreasing turnover rates of SOM, both again, much more pronounced in the active pool. These dynamics trace an initial ecosystem disturbance after abandonment, which slows down with time. Although C recovery and adjusted turnover rates of SOM progressed towards a new steady state of ecosystem; full restoration was not achieved within the chronosequential time scale of 120 years.

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