Climate and geology overwrite land use effects on soil organic nitrogen cycling on a continental scale
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Published:2022-12-05
Issue:23
Volume:19
Page:5419-5433
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Noll LisaORCID, Zhang Shasha, Zheng Qing, Hu Yuntao, Hofhansl FlorianORCID, Wanek WolfgangORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Soil fertility and plant productivity are globally
constrained by N availability. Proteins are the largest N reservoir in soils,
and the cleavage of proteins into small peptides and amino acids has been
shown to be the rate-limiting step in the terrestrial N cycle. However, we
are still lacking a profound understanding of the environmental controls of
this process. Here we show that integrated effects of climate and soil
geochemistry drive protein cleavage across large scales. We measured gross
protein depolymerization rates in mineral and organic soils sampled across a
4000 km long European transect covering a wide range of climates, geologies
and land uses. Based on structural equation models we identified that soil
organic N cycling was strongly controlled by substrate availability, e.g., by
soil protein content. Soil geochemistry was a secondary predictor, by
controlling protein stabilization mechanisms and protein availability.
Precipitation was identified as the main climatic control on protein
depolymerization, by affecting soil weathering and soil organic matter
accumulation. In contrast, land use was a poor predictor of protein
depolymerization. Our results highlight the need to consider geology and
precipitation effects on soil geochemistry when estimating and predicting
soil N cycling at large scales.
Funder
Austrian Science Fund
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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