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  5. Soil C and N availability determine the priming effect: microbial N mining and stoichiometric decomposition theories

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Article
English
2013

Soil C and N availability determine the priming effect: microbial N mining and stoichiometric decomposition theories

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English
2013
Global Change Biology
Vol 20 (7)
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12475

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Yakov Kuzyakov
Yakov Kuzyakov

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Ruirui Chen
Mehmet Şenbayram
Sergey Blagodatsky
+5 more

Abstract

The increasing input of anthropogenically derived nitrogen (N) to ecosystems raises a crucial question: how does available N modify the decomposer community and thus affects the mineralization of soil organic matter (SOM). Moreover, N input modifies the priming effect (PE), that is, the effect of fresh organics on the microbial decomposition of SOM. We studied the interactive effects of C and N on SOM mineralization (by natural (13) C labelling adding C4 -sucrose or C4 -maize straw to C3 -soil) in relation to microbial growth kinetics and to the activities of five hydrolytic enzymes. This encompasses the groups of parameters governing two mechanisms of priming effects - microbial N mining and stoichiometric decomposition theories. In sole C treatments, positive PE was accompanied by a decrease in specific microbial growth rates, confirming a greater contribution of K-strategists to the decomposition of native SOM. Sucrose addition with N significantly accelerated mineralization of native SOM, whereas mineral N added with plant residues accelerated decomposition of plant residues. This supports the microbial mining theory in terms of N limitation. Sucrose addition with N was accompanied by accelerated microbial growth, increased activities of β-glucosidase and cellobiohydrolase, and decreased activities of xylanase and leucine amino peptidase. This indicated an increased contribution of r-strategists to the PE and to decomposition of cellulose but the decreased hemicellulolytic and proteolytic activities. Thus, the acceleration of the C cycle was primed by exogenous organic C and was controlled by N. This confirms the stoichiometric decomposition theory. Both K- and r-strategists were beneficial for priming effects, with an increasing contribution of K-selected species under N limitation. Thus, the priming phenomenon described in 'microbial N mining' theory can be ascribed to K-strategists. In contrast, 'stoichiometric decomposition' theory, that is, accelerated OM mineralization due to balanced microbial growth, is explained by domination of r-strategists.

How to cite this publication

Ruirui Chen, Mehmet Şenbayram, Sergey Blagodatsky, Olga Myachina, Klaus Dittert, Xiangui Lin, Еvgenia Blagodatskaya, Yakov Kuzyakov (2013). Soil C and N availability determine the priming effect: microbial N mining and stoichiometric decomposition theories. Global Change Biology, 20(7), pp. 2356-2367, DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12475.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2013

Authors

8

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Global Change Biology

DOI

10.1111/gcb.12475

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