Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8362647 Soil Biology and Biochemistry 2018 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Soil nitrogen (N) availability is a major constraint for plant growth and consequently impacts soil carbon (C) sequestration following afforestation. The transformation of soil organic N to plant available form is predominantly catalyzed by N-hydrolyzing enzymes. Yet how N-hydrolyzing enzymes affect N availability for soil C sequestration under afforestation remains unclear. Here, we examined N-hydrolyzing enzyme activities, N masses (N contents in equivalent soil mass) and the δ15N values of total N (TN) pool and stable N pool (SN, NaOCl-resistant) in soil aggregates following 30 years of afforestation in subtropical China. The relationships of soil N mass and supply via enzymes with those of C were also developed. Afforestation increased TN masses and N-hydrolyzing enzyme activities, but declined the percentages of SN in TN and the δ15N values in soil aggregates. Soil TN mass was positively correlated with soil organic C mass in aggregates across land use types. Similarly, soil enzymes for N acquisition scaled isometrically with C acquisition with a slope of ∼1.0. Our results indicate that N constraint for soil C sequestration can be alleviated by increasing soil N-hydrolyzing enzyme activities combined with reducing SN:TN ratios and homeostatic ecoenzymatic C:N ratios following afforestation, which lead to tight coupling of soil N and C cycling.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Soil Science
Authors
, , , , , , , , ,