Nitrogen-rich microbial products provide new organo-mineral associations for the stabilization of soil organic matter

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Nitrogen-rich microbial products provide new organo-mineral associations for the stabilization of soil organic matter. / Kopittke, Peter M.; Hernandez-Soriano, Maria C.; Dalal, Ram C.; Finn, Damien; Menzies, Neal W.; Hoeschen, Carmen; Mueller, Carsten W.

In: Global Change Biology, Vol. 24, No. 4, 2018, p. 1762-1770.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kopittke, PM, Hernandez-Soriano, MC, Dalal, RC, Finn, D, Menzies, NW, Hoeschen, C & Mueller, CW 2018, 'Nitrogen-rich microbial products provide new organo-mineral associations for the stabilization of soil organic matter', Global Change Biology, vol. 24, no. 4, pp. 1762-1770. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14009

APA

Kopittke, P. M., Hernandez-Soriano, M. C., Dalal, R. C., Finn, D., Menzies, N. W., Hoeschen, C., & Mueller, C. W. (2018). Nitrogen-rich microbial products provide new organo-mineral associations for the stabilization of soil organic matter. Global Change Biology, 24(4), 1762-1770. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14009

Vancouver

Kopittke PM, Hernandez-Soriano MC, Dalal RC, Finn D, Menzies NW, Hoeschen C et al. Nitrogen-rich microbial products provide new organo-mineral associations for the stabilization of soil organic matter. Global Change Biology. 2018;24(4):1762-1770. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14009

Author

Kopittke, Peter M. ; Hernandez-Soriano, Maria C. ; Dalal, Ram C. ; Finn, Damien ; Menzies, Neal W. ; Hoeschen, Carmen ; Mueller, Carsten W. / Nitrogen-rich microbial products provide new organo-mineral associations for the stabilization of soil organic matter. In: Global Change Biology. 2018 ; Vol. 24, No. 4. pp. 1762-1770.

Bibtex

@article{a40c5625be074ef8be56acb723d528b4,
title = "Nitrogen-rich microbial products provide new organo-mineral associations for the stabilization of soil organic matter",
abstract = "Understanding the cycling of C and N in soils is important for maintaining soil fertility while also decreasing greenhouse gas emissions, but much remains unknown about how organic matter (OM) is stabilized in soils. We used nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) to investigate the changes in C and N in a Vertisol and an Alfisol incubated for 365 days with 13C and 15N pulse labeled lucerne (Medicago sativa L.) to discriminate new inputs of OM from the existing soil OM. We found that almost all OM within the free stable microaggregates of the soil was associated with mineral particles, emphasizing the importance of organo-mineral interactions for the stabilization of C. Of particular importance, it was also found that 15N-rich microbial products originating from decomposition often sorbed directly to mineral surfaces not previously associated with OM. Thus, we have shown that N-rich microbial products preferentially attach to distinct areas of mineral surfaces compared to C-dominated moieties, demonstrating the ability of soils to store additional OM in newly formed organo-mineral associations on previously OM-free mineral surfaces. Furthermore, differences in 15N enrichment were observed between the Vertisol and Alfisol presumably due to differences in mineralogy (smectite-dominated compared to kaolinite-dominated), demonstrating the importance of mineralogy in regulating the sorption of microbial products. Overall, our findings have important implications for the fundamental understanding of OM cycling in soils, including the immobilization and storage of N-rich compounds derived from microbial decomposition and subsequent N mineralization to sustain plant growth.",
keywords = "nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry, organo-mineral interactions, soil carbon cycling, soil carbon storage, stable isotopes",
author = "Kopittke, {Peter M.} and Hernandez-Soriano, {Maria C.} and Dalal, {Ram C.} and Damien Finn and Menzies, {Neal W.} and Carmen Hoeschen and Mueller, {Carsten W.}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1111/gcb.14009",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "1762--1770",
journal = "Global Change Biology",
issn = "1354-1013",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Nitrogen-rich microbial products provide new organo-mineral associations for the stabilization of soil organic matter

AU - Kopittke, Peter M.

AU - Hernandez-Soriano, Maria C.

AU - Dalal, Ram C.

AU - Finn, Damien

AU - Menzies, Neal W.

AU - Hoeschen, Carmen

AU - Mueller, Carsten W.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Understanding the cycling of C and N in soils is important for maintaining soil fertility while also decreasing greenhouse gas emissions, but much remains unknown about how organic matter (OM) is stabilized in soils. We used nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) to investigate the changes in C and N in a Vertisol and an Alfisol incubated for 365 days with 13C and 15N pulse labeled lucerne (Medicago sativa L.) to discriminate new inputs of OM from the existing soil OM. We found that almost all OM within the free stable microaggregates of the soil was associated with mineral particles, emphasizing the importance of organo-mineral interactions for the stabilization of C. Of particular importance, it was also found that 15N-rich microbial products originating from decomposition often sorbed directly to mineral surfaces not previously associated with OM. Thus, we have shown that N-rich microbial products preferentially attach to distinct areas of mineral surfaces compared to C-dominated moieties, demonstrating the ability of soils to store additional OM in newly formed organo-mineral associations on previously OM-free mineral surfaces. Furthermore, differences in 15N enrichment were observed between the Vertisol and Alfisol presumably due to differences in mineralogy (smectite-dominated compared to kaolinite-dominated), demonstrating the importance of mineralogy in regulating the sorption of microbial products. Overall, our findings have important implications for the fundamental understanding of OM cycling in soils, including the immobilization and storage of N-rich compounds derived from microbial decomposition and subsequent N mineralization to sustain plant growth.

AB - Understanding the cycling of C and N in soils is important for maintaining soil fertility while also decreasing greenhouse gas emissions, but much remains unknown about how organic matter (OM) is stabilized in soils. We used nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) to investigate the changes in C and N in a Vertisol and an Alfisol incubated for 365 days with 13C and 15N pulse labeled lucerne (Medicago sativa L.) to discriminate new inputs of OM from the existing soil OM. We found that almost all OM within the free stable microaggregates of the soil was associated with mineral particles, emphasizing the importance of organo-mineral interactions for the stabilization of C. Of particular importance, it was also found that 15N-rich microbial products originating from decomposition often sorbed directly to mineral surfaces not previously associated with OM. Thus, we have shown that N-rich microbial products preferentially attach to distinct areas of mineral surfaces compared to C-dominated moieties, demonstrating the ability of soils to store additional OM in newly formed organo-mineral associations on previously OM-free mineral surfaces. Furthermore, differences in 15N enrichment were observed between the Vertisol and Alfisol presumably due to differences in mineralogy (smectite-dominated compared to kaolinite-dominated), demonstrating the importance of mineralogy in regulating the sorption of microbial products. Overall, our findings have important implications for the fundamental understanding of OM cycling in soils, including the immobilization and storage of N-rich compounds derived from microbial decomposition and subsequent N mineralization to sustain plant growth.

KW - nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry

KW - organo-mineral interactions

KW - soil carbon cycling

KW - soil carbon storage

KW - stable isotopes

U2 - 10.1111/gcb.14009

DO - 10.1111/gcb.14009

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29211318

AN - SCOPUS:85038879875

VL - 24

SP - 1762

EP - 1770

JO - Global Change Biology

JF - Global Change Biology

SN - 1354-1013

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 238953055