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Changes in Soil Aggregate Carbon Components and Responses to Plant Input during Vegetation Restoration in the Loess Plateau, China.

Yaoyue LiangJingbo FangWenjing JiaShijie WangHanyu LiuWeichao LiuQi ZhangGaihe YangXinhui HanGuangxin Ren
Published in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Vegetation restoration is an effective measure to cope with global climate change and promote soil carbon sequestration. However, during vegetation restoration, the turnover and properties of carbon within various aggregates change. The effects of plant source carbon input on surface soil and subsurface soil may be different. Thus, the characteristics of carbon components in aggregates are affected. Therefore, the research object of this study is the Robinia pseudoacacia forest located in 16-47a of the Loess Plateau, and compared with farmland. The change characteristics of organic carbon functional groups in 0-20 cm, 20-40 cm, and 40-60 cm soil layers were analyzed by Fourier near infrared spectroscopy, and the relationship between the chemical structure of organic carbon and the content of organic carbon components in soil aggregates was clarified, and the mechanism affecting the distribution of organic carbon components in soil aggregates was revealed in the process of vegetation restoration. The results show the following: (1) The stability of surface aggregates is sensitive, while that of deep aggregates is weak. Vegetation restoration increased the surface soil organic carbon content by 1.97~3.78 g·kg -1 . (2) After vegetation restoration, the relative contents of polysaccharide functional groups in >0.25 mm aggregates were significantly reduced, while the relative contents of aromatic and aliphatic functional groups of organic carbon were significantly increased. The opposite is true for aggregates smaller than 0.25 mm. (3) With the increase in soil depth, the effect of litter on organic carbon gradually decreased, while the effect of root input on the accumulation of inert carbon in deep soil was more lasting.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • plant growth
  • working memory
  • human health
  • body composition