Author
GALE, WILLIAM - IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY | |
Cambardella, Cynthia |
Submitted to: American Society of Agronomy Meetings
Publication Type: Abstract Only Publication Acceptance Date: 10/22/1998 Publication Date: N/A Citation: N/A Interpretive Summary: Technical Abstract: Soil structural stability is correlated with amount of particulate organic matter (POM) C present in soil. Our experimental objective was to quantify new C inputs from above- and belowground plant litter into stable and unstable soil macroaggregates. We devised an experiment to examine changes in aggregate-associated POM C during in situ decomposition of **14C labeled droots or shoots. The experiment was destructively sampled every 3 months for one year. We assumed that only stable macroaggregates survived slaking. All macroaggregates (>250-um) contained more root-derived POM C than surface-residue-derived POM C. Stable small macroaggregates (250- to 2000-um) had higher concentrations of new root-derived POM C than unstable small macroaggregates. In contrast, the concentration of new surface-residue-derived POM C was the same for stable and unstable small macroaggregates. Our results suggest that new root-derived C inputs are more important for determining macroaggregate stability in our simulated no-till system than new surface-residue-derived C inputs. |