Abstract

In order to explore the characteristics of the soil organic carbon(SOC)pool and its chemical composition during the succession of secondary forests in the Loess Plateau, samples of the primary stage (Populus davidiana forest), transition stage (Populus davidiana and Quercus wutaishansea mixed forest), and top stage (Quercus wutaishansea forest) of secondary forest succession in the Huanglong Mountain forest area of the Loess Plateau in Northern Shaanxi were selected as the research object. The variation characteristics of SOC content, storage, and its chemical composition at different soil depths (0-10, 10-20, 20-30, 30-50, and 50-100 cm) were analyzed. The results showed that:① the contents and storage of SOC increased significantly with the secondary forest succession process (P<0.05). The content of SOC decreased significantly with the increase in soil depth, and the storage of SOC increased from 64.8 Mg·hm-2 in the primary stage to 129.2 Mg·hm-2 in the top stage, with an increase of 99%. ② During the succession of secondary forests, in the surface (0-30 cm) soil organic carbon, the relative content of aliphatic carbon components that have a simple structure and can be decomposed more easily decreased, and the relative content of aromatic carbon components that have a complex structure and cannot be decomposed easily increased, indicating that the chemical composition of organic carbon stability of surface-layer soil increased significantly with the process of secondary forest succession. However, the stability of the chemical composition of SOC in the deep layer (30-100 cm) first increased and then decreased, that is, the transition stage>the top stage>the primary stage. ③In the process of secondary forest succession, the stability of SOC chemical composition in the primary stage and transition stage increased significantly with the increase in soil depth. The top stage tended to be stable, and the deep soil carbon stability decreased slightly. ④ Pearson correlation analysis showed that during the secondary forest succession process, SOC storage and chemical composition stability were significantly negatively correlated with soil total phosphorus content. In general, the content and storage of SOC in the 0-100 cm soil increased significantly during the secondary forest succession, playing the role of a "carbon sink." The stability of the chemical composition of SOC in the surface layer (0-30 cm) increased significantly, but in the deep layer (30-100 cm), it increased first and then decreased.

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