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  4. Control of landscape position on organic matter decomposition via soil moisture during a wet summer
 
research article

Control of landscape position on organic matter decomposition via soil moisture during a wet summer

Francoys, Astrid
•
Li, Haichao
•
Mendoza, Orly  
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August 28, 2024
Soil & Tillage Research

Sustainable cropland management requires preservation of soil organic matter (SOM). In spite of in depth understanding gained from ample field and laboratory studies, we have a poor understanding of landscape scale spatial variation of fresh organic matter (OM) decomposition and its conversion into soil organic carbon (SOC). Particularly, local topographic position may be expected to co-control these processes via soil hydrology. In this study, we sought to identify if such control is significant by setting up a field experiment with two contrasting positions across 10 gently sloping cropland fields covering three different soil texture groups, i.e. loamy sand, (sandy) loam and silt loam. We wanted to link OM decomposition to within-field differences in soil moisture, whilst keeping variation in other soil and management factors minimal. Specifically, mesocosms with 13C enriched ryegrass (the OM source) were incorporated in the fields for ten weeks and afterwards, soil was separated into > 500 mu m, 53 - 500 mu m and < 53 m sized fractions. Overall, we found that lower located positions were wetter than higher positions with average differences of 11 %, 20 % and 16 % in water-filled pore space for the loamy sand, (sandy) loam and silt loam soil, respectively. Mineralization of added OM was surprisingly independent of landscape position, even though moisture conditions appeared wetter than optimal at the low but not at the high landscape positions. Remaining ryegrass residues > 500 mu m did follow local topography-driven gradients in soil moisture with higher amounts in low landscape positions. In other words, drier conditions at high landscape positions improved coarse OM decomposition, with consequently more ryegrass-carbon (C) ending up in finer soil fractions (< 500 m). Additionally, soil texture affected decomposition of the smallest fraction (< 53 m) with a stabilizing effect for finer-textured (silt loam) soils. We conclude that, despite significant contrasts in moisture conditions between landscape positions, within-field spatial variability of OM mineralization was overall limited during the observed wet summer period. Nevertheless, landscape position affected the quality of remnant unmineralized C, with relatively more conversion of freshly added OM into OM associated with silt and clay at the drier higher positions, potentially improving the long-term stability of SOM. Likewise observations under different weather conditions are needed to evaluate the necessity of precise modelling of local soil hydrology for predicting SOC stock evolution on the landscape scale.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.still.2024.106277
Web of Science ID

WOS:001308981000001

Author(s)
Francoys, Astrid

Ghent University

Li, Haichao

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

Mendoza, Orly  

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

Dewitte, Kevin

Ghent University

Bode, Samuel

Ghent University

Boeckx, Pascal

Ghent University

Cornelis, Wim

Ghent University

De Neve, Stefaan

Ghent University

Sleutel, Steven

Ghent University

Date Issued

2024-08-28

Publisher

ELSEVIER

Published in
Soil & Tillage Research
Volume

244

Article Number

106277

Subjects

Organic matter decomposition

•

Landscape location

•

Topographic position

•

Soil moisture

•

Cropland

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SOIL  
FunderFunding(s)Grant NumberGrant URL

FWO

FWO: G066020N

Available on Infoscience
February 1, 2025
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/246351
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