Black carbon decomposition and incorporation into soil microbial biomass estimated by <sup>14</sup>C labeling

Abstract

Incomplete combustion of organics such as vegetation or fossil fuel led to accumulation of charred products in the upper soil horizon. Such charred products, frequently called pyrogenic carbon or black carbon (BC), may act as an important long-term carbon (C) sink because its microbial decomposition and chemical transformation is probably very slow. Direct estimations of BC decomposition rates are absent because the BC content changes are too small for any relevant experimental period. Estimations based on CO<inf>2</inf> efflux are also unsuitable because the contribution of BC to CO<inf>2</inf> is too small compared to soil organic matter (SOM) and other sources. We produced BC by charring <sup>14</sup>C labeled residues of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne). We then incubated this <sup>14</sup>C labeled BC in Ah of a Haplic Luvisol soil originated from loess or in loess for 3.2 years. The decomposition rates of BC were estimated based on <sup>14</sup>CO<inf>2</inf> sampled 44 times during the 3.2 years incubation period (1181 days). Additionally we introduced five repeated treatments with either 1) addition of glucose as an energy source for microorganisms to initiate cometabolic BC decomposition or 2) intensive mixing of the soil to check the effect of mechanical disturbance of aggregates on BC decomposition. Black carbon addition amounting to 20% of C<inf>org</inf> of the soil or 200% of C<inf>org</inf> of loess did not change total CO<inf>2</inf> efflux from the soil and slightly decreased it from the loess. This shows a very low BC contribution to recent CO<inf>2</inf> fluxes. The decomposition rates of BC calculated based on <sup>14</sup>C in CO<inf>2</inf> were similar in soil and in loess and amounted to 1.36 10<sup>-5</sup> d<sup>-1</sup> (=1.36 10<sup>-3</sup>% d<sup>-1</sup>). This corresponds to a decomposition of about 0.5% BC per year under optimal conditions. Considering about 10 times slower decomposition of BC under natural conditions, the mean residence time (MRT) of BC is about 2000 years, and the half-life is about 1400 years. Considering the short duration of the incubation and the typical decreasing decomposition rates with time, we conclude that the MRT of BC in soils is in the range of millennia. The strong increase in BC decomposition rates (up to 6 times) after adding glucose and the decrease of this stimulation after 2 weeks in the soil (and after 3 months in loess) allowed us to conclude cometabolic BC decomposition. This was supported by higher stimulation of BC decomposition by glucose addition compared to mechanical disturbance as well as higher glucose effects in loess compared to the soil. The effect of mechanical disturbance was over within 2 weeks. The incorporation of BC into microorganisms (fumigation/extraction) after 624 days of incubation amounted to 2.6 and 1.5% of <sup>14</sup>C input into soil and loess, respectively. The amount of BC in dissolved organic carbon (DOC) was below the detection limit (&lt;0.01%) showing no BC decomposition products in water leached from the soil. We conclude that applying <sup>14</sup>C labeled BC opens new ways for very sensitive tracing of BC transformation products in released CO<inf>2</inf>, microbial biomass, DOC, and SOM pools with various properties. &copy; 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

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