Integrating microbial community properties, biomass and necromass to predict cropland soil organic carbon

Author:

Wang Chao12ORCID,Wang Xu1,Zhang Yang1,Morrissey Ember3ORCID,Liu Yue1,Sun Lifei1,Qu Lingrui1,Sang Changpeng1,Zhang Hong1,Li Guochen1ORCID,Zhang Lili1,Fang Yunting1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CAS Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Management, Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Shenyang 110016, China

2. Key Laboratory of Terrestrial Ecosystem Carbon Neutrality , Liaoning Province, Shenyang 110016, China

3. Division of Plant and Soil Sciences, West Virginia University , Morgantown 26506, USA

Abstract

Abstract Manipulating microorganisms to increase soil organic carbon (SOC) in croplands remains a challenge. Soil microbes are important drivers of SOC sequestration, especially via their necromass accumulation. However, microbial parameters are rarely used to predict cropland SOC stocks, possibly due to uncertainties regarding the relationships between microbial carbon pools, community properties and SOC. Herein we evaluated the microbial community properties (diversity and network complexity), microbial carbon pools (biomass and necromass carbon) and SOC in 468 cropland soils across northeast China. We found that not only microbial necromass carbon but also microbial community properties (diversity and network complexity) and biomass carbon were correlated with SOC. Microbial biomass carbon and diversity played more important role in predicting SOC for maize, while microbial network complexity was more important for rice. Models to predict SOC performed better when the microbial community and microbial carbon pools were included simultaneously. Taken together our results suggest that microbial carbon pools and community properties influence SOC accumulation in croplands, and management practices that improve these microbial parameters may increase cropland SOC levels.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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