Xiaojuan Feng / Chinese Academy of Sciences;Institute of Botany
Mineral-associated organic matter (MAOM) stores the majority of soil carbon and nitrogen (N) and largely consists of N-rich microbial residues. However, the decomposition potential of MAOM and intrinsic properties regulating its degradation remain poorly understood. Here, we deliberately constructed 13C-labelled MAOM with varying molecular compositions and organic carbon (OC) loadings, and conducted three independent microcosm experiments to investigate how MAOM’s intrinsic properties influence its persistence in soils. Microbial decomposition of MAOM was monitored by measuring the rate and isotopic signature of respired CO2 during 30-day incubations, while MAOM molecular composition was characterized using pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. We found that MAOM decomposition was positively correlated with the abundance of N compounds, which emerged as the primary predictor of MAOM decomposition across all experiments. Notably, N-richmicrobial residues preferentially stacked on minerals coated with pre-existing organics via organo-organic interactions, rather than on unoccupied mineral sites. This led to high OC loadings as well as high decomposition potentials for N-rich MAOM. These findings suggest that microbe-derived N-rich MAOM decomposes rapidly, challenging the prevailing view that microbe-derived compounds are strongly sorbed to mineral surfaces and resistant to degradation. Furthermore, the high decomposability of OC retained through organo-organic interactions potentially poses an upper limit of carbon retention on MAOM, offering an alternative explanation to carbon saturation other than mineral surface availability. Collectively, this study highlights the need to integrate MAOM properties (composition and OC loading) to better predict the carbon sequestration potentials and dynamics of MAOM in soils.
National Natural Science Foundation of China Geobiology Society National Committee of Stratigraphy of China Ministry of Science and Technology Geological Society of China Paleontological Society of China Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, CAS International Commission on Stratigraphy International Paleontological Association
承办单位
State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology, China University of Geosciences (CUG, Wuhan)