Shuainan Liu, Mingjun Xie, Wende Lu, Xinyue Zhang, Mengyin Du, Yao Yao, Jianyu Yuan, Guang Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Progressively higher atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition increasingly affects soil ecosystems' elemental cycling and stability. Biochar (BC) amendment has emerged as a possible means of preserving soil system stability. Nevertheless, the pattern of soil–microbial nutrient cycling and system stability in response to BC after high N deposition in ecologically sensitive regions remains uncertain. Therefore, we investigated the effects of high N (9 g N·m−2·a−1), BC (0, 20, 40 t·ha−1), and combinations of the treatments on soil organic carbon (SOC), total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), microbial biomass carbon (MBC), nitrogen (MBN), phosphorus (MBP), microbial entropy (qMB), and stoichiometric imbalance (Cimb:Nimb:Pimb). We found that high N addition decreased topsoil (0–20 cm) TP, C:N, qMBN, and Cimb:Nimb values and increased TN, C:P, N:P, qMBP, Cimb:Pimb, and Nimb:Pimb values. However, BC addition increased 0–40 cm soil qMBC and Nimb:Pimb values and decreased qMBN, Cimb:Nimb, and Cimb:Pimb values. Meanwhile, high BC additions attenuated BC's promotion of soil–microbial nutrients. We observed that a mixture of high N and BC increased the 0–40 cm SOC and TP content, promoted the accumulation of MBN and MBP in the subsoil (20–40 cm), and decreased the topsoil Cimb:Pimb and Nimb:Pimb values compared to high N additions. The impact of high N and BC additions on N and P elements varied significantly between the different soil depths. In addition, redundancy analysis identified C:N, MBC, MBN, and C:P as pivotal factors affecting alterations in soil qMB and stoichiometric imbalance. Overall, adding BC reduced the negative impacts of high N deposition on the stability of soil–microbial systems in the Loess Plateau, suggesting a new approach for managing ecologically fragile areas.
期刊介绍:
Ecology and Evolution is the peer reviewed journal for rapid dissemination of research in all areas of ecology, evolution and conservation science. The journal gives priority to quality research reports, theoretical or empirical, that develop our understanding of organisms and their diversity, interactions between them, and the natural environment.
Ecology and Evolution gives prompt and equal consideration to papers reporting theoretical, experimental, applied and descriptive work in terrestrial and aquatic environments. The journal will consider submissions across taxa in areas including but not limited to micro and macro ecological and evolutionary processes, characteristics of and interactions between individuals, populations, communities and the environment, physiological responses to environmental change, population genetics and phylogenetics, relatedness and kin selection, life histories, systematics and taxonomy, conservation genetics, extinction, speciation, adaption, behaviour, biodiversity, species abundance, macroecology, population and ecosystem dynamics, and conservation policy.