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2025
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15238887 |
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| author | Wang, Chengliang Ren, Jiayi Cui, Yuemei Henry, Hugh A. L. Carrillo, Yolima Shi, Baoku Su, Ting Yan, Lina Cui, Yanan Chai, Hua Bao, Guangdao Zhang, Zhonghui Sun, Wei |
| author_facet | Wang, Chengliang Ren, Jiayi Cui, Yuemei Henry, Hugh A. L. Carrillo, Yolima Shi, Baoku Su, Ting Yan, Lina Cui, Yanan Chai, Hua Bao, Guangdao Zhang, Zhonghui Sun, Wei |
| contents | <p>Grassland carbon storage depends on microbial-mediated interactions between grazing and nitrogen (N) addition, which regulates the balance between soil organic carbon (SOC) retention and priming effects. However, uncertainties regarding these interactive mechanisms constrain projections of SOC vulnerability under global change.</p> <p>We conducted a factorial field experiment involving grazing and N addition in a <em>Leymus chinensis</em> meadow in northeastern China. In the fifth year of the experiment, we collected soil to conduct a 70-day soil incubation combined with labile carbon (glucose) addition to examine the effects of the grazing and N addition treatments soil carbon priming and carbon retention.</p> <p>Grazing consistently increased priming effects regardless of N addition. In contrast, N addition strongly reduced priming by 41.0% in ungrazed plots but had minimal increase effects (3.2%) under grazing. Mechanistically, bacterial glucose assimilation capacity primarily mediated grazing-dependent N effects on priming, explaining 65.0% of the variation and correlating positively with priming intensity. Grazing notably decreased the net SOC balance (35.7 mg kg<sup>-1</sup> soil) and diminished the beneficial effect of N addition on SOC (+79.6% in ungrazed vs. +12.3% in grazed plots). Priming effects and bacterial glucose assimilation were dominant drivers of SOC responses under grazing, exhibiting negative correlations with net SOC balance.</p> <p><em>Synthesis and applications</em>: Our results show that grazing-induced bacterial dominance in carbon assimilation alters priming effects and net soil carbon balance under N addition, offsetting potential carbon sequestration benefits by accelerating native organic matter decomposition. Thus, microbial carbon assimilation capacity, particularly bacterial substrate assimilation, may serve as an indicator of SOC vulnerability under global change.</p> |
| format | Recurso digital |
| id | zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_15238887 |
| institution | Zenodo |
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| publishDate | 2025 |
| publisher | Zenodo |
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| spellingShingle | Grazing-N addition interactions drive soil carbon priming and balance via bacterial assimilation in a meadow steppe Wang, Chengliang Ren, Jiayi Cui, Yuemei Henry, Hugh A. L. Carrillo, Yolima Shi, Baoku Su, Ting Yan, Lina Cui, Yanan Chai, Hua Bao, Guangdao Zhang, Zhonghui Sun, Wei Soil carbon Grazing Nitrogen addition Priming effect net carbon balance Meadow grassland <p>Grassland carbon storage depends on microbial-mediated interactions between grazing and nitrogen (N) addition, which regulates the balance between soil organic carbon (SOC) retention and priming effects. However, uncertainties regarding these interactive mechanisms constrain projections of SOC vulnerability under global change.</p> <p>We conducted a factorial field experiment involving grazing and N addition in a <em>Leymus chinensis</em> meadow in northeastern China. In the fifth year of the experiment, we collected soil to conduct a 70-day soil incubation combined with labile carbon (glucose) addition to examine the effects of the grazing and N addition treatments soil carbon priming and carbon retention.</p> <p>Grazing consistently increased priming effects regardless of N addition. In contrast, N addition strongly reduced priming by 41.0% in ungrazed plots but had minimal increase effects (3.2%) under grazing. Mechanistically, bacterial glucose assimilation capacity primarily mediated grazing-dependent N effects on priming, explaining 65.0% of the variation and correlating positively with priming intensity. Grazing notably decreased the net SOC balance (35.7 mg kg<sup>-1</sup> soil) and diminished the beneficial effect of N addition on SOC (+79.6% in ungrazed vs. +12.3% in grazed plots). Priming effects and bacterial glucose assimilation were dominant drivers of SOC responses under grazing, exhibiting negative correlations with net SOC balance.</p> <p><em>Synthesis and applications</em>: Our results show that grazing-induced bacterial dominance in carbon assimilation alters priming effects and net soil carbon balance under N addition, offsetting potential carbon sequestration benefits by accelerating native organic matter decomposition. Thus, microbial carbon assimilation capacity, particularly bacterial substrate assimilation, may serve as an indicator of SOC vulnerability under global change.</p> |
| title | Grazing-N addition interactions drive soil carbon priming and balance via bacterial assimilation in a meadow steppe |
| topic | Soil carbon Grazing Nitrogen addition Priming effect net carbon balance Meadow grassland |
| url | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15238887 |