0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Contributions of fine mineral particles and active Al/Fe to stabilization of plant material in neutral-to-alkaline soils of Indo-Gangetic Plain

Geoderma 2023 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ajay Kumar Mishra, Ruohan Zhong, Randy A. Dahlgren Han Lyu, Monika Kumari, Randy A. Dahlgren Ajay Kumar Mishra, M.L. Jat, Ajay Kumar Mishra, Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren Shinya Funakawa, Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren Tetsuhiro Watanabe, Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren Tetsuhiro Watanabe, Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren Randy A. Dahlgren

Summary

Researchers studied how organic carbon added to farmland soils in northern India gets stored or broken down, finding that clay particles and aluminum and iron compounds are key to locking carbon in place for the long term. Understanding these mechanisms is important for predicting how tropical agricultural soils can help offset carbon emissions through carbon sequestration.

Factors controlling organic carbon stabilization are elusive in neutral-to-alkaline soils, thereby hindering the assessment of carbon sequestration potential across vast agricultural regions like the Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP). This study investigated controls over mineralization and stabilization of added organic matter in tropical neutral-to-alkaline soils with low organic carbon (SOC). Using topsoil and subsoil samples from 12 sites of upper-to-lower IGP, we conducted a one-year incubation with and without adding 13C-labeled maize material. We tracked CO2 release and residual C remaining in soil organic matter fractions (free, occluded particulate (oPOM), and mineral-associated organic matter (MAOM)) and analyzed organic matter molecular compositions in incubated soils using pyrolysis-GC/MS. Our results revealed that 48 ± 7 % of added maize C was mineralized, mostly within the first 70 days. Higher active Al/Fe, notably Al, retarded primary maize mineralization by facilitating aggregation. High SOC content and SOC saturation degree resulted in more maize mineralization. The disappearance of maize-unique compounds (e.g., neophytadiene) revealed substantial degradation of added maize. Regarding SOC composition, maize addition increased the relative abundance of fatty acids and decreased that of N-containing compounds. Most residual maize-derived C was found in stabilized fractions, MAOM (77 ± 15 % of residual maize C) and oPOM (8 ± 4 %). Clay fraction contributed to most maize-derived C stabilization as MAOM (path coefficient (β) = 0.81**). Moreover, the significant correlation (P < 0.001) between maize-derived oPOM C and active Al/Fe or clay + silt suggested that active Al/Fe contributed to the stabilization of maize-derived C as oPOM (β = 0.62***) probably by bonding clay and silt particles to form stable aggregates since active Al/Fe content was low (<14 cmol kg−1). Our study highlighted the importance of active Al/Fe in stabilizing SOC, by promoting aggregation and retarding degradation of residue-derived C in neutral-to-alkaline soils.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper