| Literature DB >> 26806914 |
Na Qiao1,2, Xingliang Xu3, Yuehua Hu1, Evgenia Blagodatskaya4,5, Yongwen Liu6, Douglas Schaefer1, Yakov Kuzyakov4.
Abstract
Decomposition of organic matter (OM) in soil, affectingEntities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26806914 PMCID: PMC4726261 DOI: 10.1038/srep19865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Conceptual model of organic-matter decomposition priming.
Cyan arrow indicates energetic limitations to decomposing microorganisms (MO) for priming of organic matter (OM) decomposition. Blue arrow indicates decreasing stoichiometric limitations to microorganisms for priming of OM decomposition. Photograph was made by Chuansheng Wu with his permission to use it.
Figure 2Priming by labile carbon and nitrogen inputs to leaf, wood, and organic and mineral soils.
Labile carbon and nitrogen inputs are presented as mg g−1 substrate C, with ratios below. Inset shows decomposition of these substrates incubated with water-only controls. Detailed statistical information was presented in Tables S2 and S3 in the Supplemental materials.
Figure 3Priming patterns resulting from different glucose and ammonium inputs to incubations of wood litter (a), leaf litter (b), as well as Oa horizon organic soil (c) and mineral-soil A horizon (d) from a subtropical forest.
Zero lines indicate where CO2 release did not differ from the water-only control incubations. Dotted-line arrows show gradients with largest priming effects from these carbon and nitrogen additions. This figure was made using the data from nine treatments for each OM form in Fig. 2 to create a ‘point’ (color) in its panel, with the rest of each panel interpolated from those 9 points.
Figure 4Contributions of glucose (C), ammonium (N), their interactions, and unexplained residual variation to priming effects in each of the four heterogeneous organic substrates (leaf litter, wood litter, and organic and mineral soils).
Figure 5Responses of priming of organic matter (OM) decomposition to OM C:N ratios (horizontal axis) and labile C:N ratios (vertical axis).
This contour figure was made based on all priming results of four OM forms from Fig. 2, using C:N ratios in OMs as x-axis, C:N ratios in the labile inputs as y-axis, and all priming data as z (color) axis. Priming effects vary strongly among substrates along the white dashed line, where labile carbon inputs are high and nitrogen is low. Priming effects do not vary strongly among substrates along the black dashed line where labile carbon is low and nitrogen is high. The dashed pink line indicates the substrate C:N threshold ratio where priming changes from negative to positive.