Effects of straw incorporation and potassium fertilizer on crop yields, soil organic carbon, and active carbon in the rice–wheat system

2021 
Abstract Active soil organic carbon (SOC) fractions play a key role in agricultural soil fertility. However, the effects of potassium application and straw incorporation on SOC and active SOC fractions as well as the relationships among these factors in a rice–wheat system are less well-studied. Hence, the objective of this study was to analyse the effects of potassium fertilization and straw incorporation on SOC sequestration, active carbon fractions, and crop yields in a long-term (6 years) field experiment. Four treatments were examined: no addition of potassium fertilizer and straw (CK), straw incorporation only (SI), potassium-fertilizer application only (K), and straw incorporation plus a recommended amount of potassium fertilizer (SI + K). SOC, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), light fraction organic carbon (LFOC), microbial biomass carbon (MBC), easily oxidizable carbon (EOC), crop yields, and the carbon pool management index (CMI) were determined. After 6 years, SOC content and labile C fractions in the SI treatment increased significantly, by 7.95–25.0 % and 23.6–185 %, respectively, compared to the CK treatment. Significant and positive correlations were observed between SOC, DOC, LFOC, MBC, EOC, and the CMI (r = 0.449–0.899, P
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