Coarse mineral-associated organic matter is a pivotal fraction for SOM formation and is sensitive to the quality of organic inputs

2020 
Abstract Recent models of soil organic matter (SOM) formation propose that the coarse mineral-associated fraction (coarse-MAOM) could be a pivotal fraction bridging the gap between fresh organic matter inputs and stabilized, mineral-associated SOM. However, little is known about the effect of organic input chemistry and soil texture on the carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) dynamics of this fraction. We studied SOM dynamics in a factorial field experiment comparing 10 combinations of crop residue management (retained or exported) with different fertilizer sources, including solid poultry, liquid dairy and liquid swine manure, a mineral fertilizer (NPK), and a control without N (PK) in two soils with contrasted texture. After 9 y of management, we compared the distribution of C and N within the light fraction (LF), the coarse-MAOM, and the fine mineral-associated organic matter fraction (fine-MAOM) of surface (0–5 cm) soil. We found that retention of mature crop residues increased soil C content through an increase in LF and coarse-MAOM but did not influence N content in any fractions. Conversely, the fertilizer source influenced C and N accumulation in the coarse- and fine-MAOM in the silty clay soil where greater values were generally found with poultry and liquid dairy manures. Similar trends were found in the sandy loam soil, but statistically significant differences were only found for C in the coarse-MAOM fraction. The coarse-MAOM fraction had a much lower C:N ratio (15–16) than LF (26–36) and appeared generally responsive to the different organic inputs. Despite its limited size (10% of total soil organic carbon), coarse-MAOM appeared to represent a central location for the formation of new SOM and for the accumulation of C and N following fresh organic inputs. We therefore propose that it is considered in models as a pivotal fraction of SOM formation in arable soils.
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