Soil fauna affects the optical properties in alkaline solutions extracted (humic acid-like) from forest litters during different phenological periods

Author:

Tan Yu12,Yang Wanqin12,Ni Xiangyin1,Tan Bo1,Yue Kai1,Cao Rui12,Liao Shu12,Wu Fuzhong12

Affiliation:

1. Provincial Key Laboratory of Ecological Forestry Engineering, Institute of Ecology and Forestry, Sichuan Agricultural University, Chengdu, Sichuan 611130, People’s Republic of China.

2. Collaborative Innovation Center for Ecological Security in the Upper Reaches of the Yangtze River, Chengdu 611130, People’s Republic of China.

Abstract

The formation of soil organic matter via humification of plant litter is important for long-term carbon sequestration in forests; however, whether soil fauna affects litter humification is unclear. In this study, we quantified the effects of soil fauna on the optical properties (i.e., ΔlogK and E4/E6) of the alkaline-extracted humic acid-like solutions of four foliar litters by removing soil fauna via litterbags with different mesh sizes in two subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forests. Litterbags were collected at the leaf falling, budding, expanding, maturation, and senescence stages from November 2013 to October 2015 to assess whether the effects of soil fauna on litter humification vary in different plant phenology periods. The results showed that soil fauna significantly reduced the ΔlogK and E4/E6 values in the leaf expanding stage of oak litter and in the leaf falling stage of camphor and fir litters. The richness index of soil fauna explained 21%, 55%, 19%, and 45% of the variations in the E4/E6 values for oak, fir, camphor, and pine litters, respectively. The effects of litter water content on these optical properties were greater than that of temperature. These results indicated that soil fauna plays a key role in litter humification in the leaf expanding and falling stages and are potentially involved in soil carbon sequestration in these subtropical forests.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Soil Science

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