Precipitation Patterns Impact Soil Aggregates and Organic Carbon of an Alpine Wetland on The Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau

30 Pages Posted: 9 Jan 2024

See all articles by Qianwei Li

Qianwei Li

Beijing Forestry University

Xiaoya Zhang

Beijing Forestry University

Junqin Gao

Beijing Forestry University

Riikka Rinnan

University of Copenhagen

Yi Jiao

University of Copenhagen

Jinfeng Liang

Jiangxi Normal University

Fei-Hai Yu

Taizhou University

Abstract

Soil aggregates are the basic structural components that affect the storage and stability of soil organic carbon (SOC). However, little is known about how precipitation changes affect soil aggregates and SOC in alpine wetlands. Plots of an alpine wetland on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau were subjected to two precipitation frequencies (high vs. low, i.e., 100% and 50% frequency of nature rainfall) crossed with two precipitation amounts (high vs. low, i.e., 100% and 70% of the amount of natural rainfall). Two years later, we investigated changes of soil aggregates (silt + clay, microaggregates, and macroaggregates) and SOC in three soil depths, i.e., 0-15 cm, 15-30 cm and 30-50 cm. The low frequency high amount and low amount high frequency treatment led to a 19.63% and 26.2% increase in SOC compared with the high frequency high amount treatment. Additionally, the macroaggregate fraction in the 0-15 cm soil depth decreased by 21.92% and 18.57% in the low frequency high amount and low amount high frequency treatment than that in the high frequency high amount treatment. However, none of the three soil aggregate fractions in the 15-30 cm soil depth responded to the changes in the precipitation patterns. The structural equation models showed that SOC was regulated by soil aggregate composition and microbial biomass carbon. Reduced precipitation frequency and amount shifted macroaggregate-associated organic carbon to microaggregate-associated organic carbon in the 0-15 cm soil depth. The results indicate that the reduction in precipitation frequency and amount decreased the mean weight diameter of the surface soil, weakening the physical protection of soil aggregates for SOC. Therefore, changes in precipitation patterns may produce a predominant impact on SOC storage and stability in alpine wetlands via their impacts on soil aggregate composition.

Keywords: aggregate, aggregate associated carbon, precipitation, soil carbon pool, soil moisture

Suggested Citation

Li, Qianwei and Zhang, Xiaoya and Gao, Junqin and Rinnan, Riikka and Jiao, Yi and Liang, Jinfeng and Yu, Fei-Hai, Precipitation Patterns Impact Soil Aggregates and Organic Carbon of an Alpine Wetland on The Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4689312 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4689312

Qianwei Li

Beijing Forestry University ( email )

35 Qinghua E Rd.
WuDaoKou
Beijing, 100085
China

Xiaoya Zhang

Beijing Forestry University ( email )

35 Qinghua E Rd.
WuDaoKou
Beijing, 100085
China

Junqin Gao (Contact Author)

Beijing Forestry University ( email )

35 Qinghua E Rd.
WuDaoKou
Beijing, 100085
China

Riikka Rinnan

University of Copenhagen ( email )

Yi Jiao

University of Copenhagen ( email )

Nørregade 10
Copenhagen, DK-1165
Denmark

Jinfeng Liang

Jiangxi Normal University ( email )

99 Ziyang Ave
Nanchang
China

Fei-Hai Yu

Taizhou University ( email )

Zhejiang
China

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