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Plant species richness leaves a legacy of enhanced root litter-induced decomposition in soil
- Source :
- Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 80, 341-348, Soil Biology and Biochemistry 80 (2015), Soil Biology & Biochemistry, 80, 341-348. Elsevier B.V.
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Increasing plant species richness generally enhances plant biomass production, which may enhance accumulation of carbon (C) in soil. However, the net change in soil C also depends on the effect of plant diversity on C loss through decomposition of organic matter. Plant diversity can affect organic matter decomposition via changes in litter species diversity and composition, and via alteration of abiotic and/or biotic attributes of the soil (soil legacy effect). Previous studies examined the two effects on decomposition rates separately, and do therefore not elucidate the relative importance of the two effects, and their potential interaction. Here we separated the effects of litter mixing and litter identity from the soil legacy effect by conducting a factorial laboratory experiment where two fresh single root litters and their mixture were mixed with soils previously cultivated with single plant species or mixtures of two or four species. We found no evidence for litter-mixing effects. In contrast, root litter-induced CO2 production was greater in soils from high diversity plots than in soils from monocultures, regardless of the type of root litter added. Soil microbial PLFA biomass and composition at the onset of the experiment was unaffected by plant species richness, whereas soil potential nitrogen (N) mineralization rate increased with plant species richness. Our results indicate that the soil legacy effect may be explained by changes in soil N availability. There was no effect of plant species richness on decomposition of a recalcitrant substrate (compost). This suggests that the soil legacy effect predominantly acted on the decomposition of labile organic matter. We thus demonstrated that plant species richness enhances root litter-induced soil respiration via a soil legacy effect but not via a litter-mixing effect. This implies that the positive impacts of species richness on soil C sequestration may be weakened by accelerated organic matter decomposition.
- Subjects :
- productivity
leaf-litter
Soil legacy effect
Soil biology
Bulk soil
Soil Science
microbial communities
rates
Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation
Root litter
Microbiology
complex mixtures
nitrogen
diversity
biodiversity loss
functional composition
experimental grassland ecosystems
Bodembiologie
Decomposition
Chemistry
Soil organic matter
national
Soil chemistry
food and beverages
Biodiversity
Soil carbon
Soil Biology
Plant litter
carbon storage
PE&RC
Humus
Litter-mixing effect
Agronomy
Grasslands
Centre for Crop Systems Analysis
Plantenecologie en Natuurbeheer
Soil fertility
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00380717
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 80, 341-348, Soil Biology and Biochemistry 80 (2015), Soil Biology & Biochemistry, 80, 341-348. Elsevier B.V.
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9edf18a421dafff352d99b51686b20cc