Abstract

Currently available investigations often fail to adequately recognize that soil does not freeze or thaw instantly nor uniformly, but unidirectionally and progressively. Unidirectional freeze-thaw can re-organize soil physio-, chemical- and biological-properties across layers as well among aggregates, thus posing far-reaching yet undervalued impacts on soil carbon biogeochemical cycling, especially in eroding settings. In this study, a Mollisol was refilled into soil columns, and respectively experienced complete freeze-thaw (i.e., no layer distinguished), and progressive freeze-thaw (i.e., from outer layer T1, to inner core T3). After thawing, all soils were fractionated into six size classes, and each size class was then incubated at 10℃ over 7 days to measure daily CO2 emission rate. Our results show that: (1) The soil microbial biomass carbon (SMBC) was generally reduced by 25 % after freeze-thaw, but only the finest aggregates ≤ 32 μm maintained comparable CO2 emission rates. (2) The inner core T3 thawed last and survived with significantly more SMBC and CO2, but lower respiratory quotient (qCO2), than the outer layer T1 thawed first. (3) The fine aggregates survived with more SMBC and total CO2 emissions, but significantly lower qCO2 and smaller ratios of fungal to bacterial biomass carbon, than the coarse aggregates. The disproportionally less respiratory carbon losses (i.e., lower qCO2) in T3 was probably because the lagged freezing and thus weakened water-ice phase changes in the inner core helped to better preserve the soil microbes. The fungal-dominant coarse aggregates were very responsive to freezing and evidently more respiratory active, whereas the fine aggregates were more resilient as the enhanced freezing point depression and the thus prolonged unfrozen state, fostering a better microbial survival with bacteria-dominant communities and robust basal respiration. Although limited to controlled simulation, this study may help to disentangle the role of unidirectional freeze-thaw in perturbing slope-scale soil carbon biogeochemical cycling.

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