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A dual isotope approach to isolate soil carbon pools of different turnover times

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https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/ks65hh95q

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  • Soils are globally significant sources and sinks of atmospheric CO₂. Increasing the resolution of soil carbon turnover estimates is important for predicting the response of soil carbon cycling to environmental change. We show that soil carbon turnover times can be more finely resolved using a dual isotope label like the one provided by elevated CO₂ experiments that use fossil CO₂. We modeled each soil physical fraction as two pools with different turnover times using the atmospheric ¹⁴C bomb spike in combination with the label in ¹⁴C and ¹³C provided by an elevated CO₂ experiment in a California annual grassland. In sandstone and serpentine soils, the light fraction carbon was 21–54% fast cycling with 2–9 yr turnover, and 36–79% slow cycling with turnover slower than 100 yr. This validates model treatment of the light fraction as active and intermediate cycling carbon. The dense, mineral-associated fraction also had a very dynamic component, consisting of ~ 7% fast-cycling carbon and ~93% very slow cycling carbon. Similarly, half the microbial biomass carbon in the sandstone soil was more than 5 yr old, and 40% of the carbon respired by microbes had been fixed more than 5 yr ago. Resolving each density fraction into two pools revealed that only a small component of total soil carbon is responsible for most CO₂ efflux from these soils. In the sandstone soil, 11% of soil carbon contributes more than 90% of the annual CO₂ efflux. The fact that soil physical fractions, designed to isolate organic material of roughly homogeneous physico-chemical state, contain material of dramatically different turnover times is consistent with recent observations of rapid isotope incorporation into seemingly stable fractions and with emerging evidence for hot spots or micro-site variation of decomposition within the soil matrix. Predictions of soil carbon storage using a turnover time estimated with the assumption of a single pool per density fraction would greatly overestimate the near-term response to changes in productivity or decomposition rates. Therefore, these results suggest a slower initial change in soil carbon storage due to environmental change than has been assumed by simpler (one-pool) mass balance calculations.
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  • Torn, M. S., Kleber, M., Zavaleta, E. S., Zhu, B., Field, C. B., and Trumbore, S. E.: A dual isotope approach to isolate soil carbon pools of different turnover times, Biogeosciences, 10, 8067-8081, doi:10.5194/bg-10-8067-2013, 2013.
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  • 10
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  • 12
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  • This work was supported by the Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, US Department of Energy under contract no. DE-AC03-76SF00098 and by the Office of Science, US Department of Energy under contract no. DE-AC02-05CH11231. The Jasper Ridge elevated CO₂ experiment was supported by grants from the US National Science Foundation to the Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford University, and University of California, Berkeley.
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