Author:
Basile-Doelsch Isabelle,Balesdent Jérôme,Pellerin Sylvain
Abstract
Abstract. Soil organic matter (OM) represents a key C pool for
climate regulation but also an essential component for soil functions and
services. Scientific research in the 21st century has considerably improved
our knowledge of soil organic matter and its dynamics, particularly under
the pressure of the global disruption of the carbon cycle. This paper
reviews the processes that control C dynamics in soil, the representation of
these processes over time, and their dependence on variations in major
biotic and abiotic factors. The most recent advanced knowledge gained on
soil organic matter includes the following. (1) Most organic matter is composed of small
molecules, derived from living organisms, without transformation via
additional abiotic organic polymerization; (2) microbial compounds are
predominant in the long term; (3) primary belowground production contributes
more to organic matter than aboveground inputs; (4) the contribution of less
biodegradable compounds to soil organic matter is low in the long term; (5) two major factors determine the soil organic carbon production “yield” from
the initial substrates: the yield of carbon used by microorganisms and the
association with minerals, particularly poorly crystalline minerals, which
stabilize microbial compounds; (6) interactions between plants and
microorganisms also regulate the carbon turnover time and therefore carbon
stocks; (7) among abiotic and biotic factors that regulate the carbon
turnover time, only a few are considered in current modeling approaches
(i.e., temperature, soil water content, pH, particle size, and sometimes C and N
interactions); and (8) although most models of soil C dynamics assume that the
processes involved are linear, there are now many indications of nonlinear
soil C dynamics processes linked to soil OM dynamics (e.g., priming). Farming
practices, therefore, affect soil C stocks not only through carbon inputs but
also via their effect on microbial and organomineral interactions, yet it
has still not been possible to properly identify the main mechanisms
involved in C loss (or gain). Greater insight into these mechanisms and their
interdependencies, hierarchy and sensitivity to agricultural practices could
provide future levers of action for C sequestration in soil.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
136 articles.
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