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Submicron structures provide preferential spots for carbon and nitrogen sequestration in soils.


ABSTRACT: The sequestration of carbon and nitrogen by clay-sized particles in soils is well established, and clay content or mineral surface area has been used to estimate the sequestration potential of soils. Here, via incubation of a sieved (<2?mm) topsoil with labelled litter, we find that only some of the clay-sized surfaces bind organic matter (OM). Surprisingly, <19% of the visible mineral areas show an OM attachment. OM is preferentially associated with organo-mineral clusters with rough surfaces. By combining nano-scale secondary ion mass spectrometry and isotopic tracing, we distinguish between new labelled and pre-existing OM and show that new OM is preferentially attached to already present organo-mineral clusters. These results, which provide evidence that only a limited proportion of the clay-sized surfaces contribute to OM sequestration, revolutionize our view of carbon sequestration in soils and the widely used carbon saturation estimates.

SUBMITTER: Vogel C 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3896754 | biostudies-literature | 2014

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Submicron structures provide preferential spots for carbon and nitrogen sequestration in soils.

Vogel Cordula C   Mueller Carsten W CW   Höschen Carmen C   Buegger Franz F   Heister Katja K   Schulz Stefanie S   Schloter Michael M   Kögel-Knabner Ingrid I  

Nature communications 20140101


The sequestration of carbon and nitrogen by clay-sized particles in soils is well established, and clay content or mineral surface area has been used to estimate the sequestration potential of soils. Here, via incubation of a sieved (<2 mm) topsoil with labelled litter, we find that only some of the clay-sized surfaces bind organic matter (OM). Surprisingly, <19% of the visible mineral areas show an OM attachment. OM is preferentially associated with organo-mineral clusters with rough surfaces.  ...[more]

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