Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Microbially mediated mechanisms underlie soil carbon accrual by conservation agriculture under decade-long warming

Jing Tian, Jennifer A. J. Dungait, Ruixing Hou, Ye Deng, Iain P. Hartley, Yunfeng Yang, Yakov Kuzyakov, Fusuo Zhang, M. Francesca Cotrufo, Jizhong Zhou

Nature Communications · 2024

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Summary

Increasing soil organic carbon (SOC) in croplands by switching from conventional to conservation management may be hampered by stimulated microbial decomposition under warming. Here, we test the interactive effects of agricultural management and warming on SOC persistence and underlying microbial mechanisms in a decade-long controlled experiment on a wheat-maize cropping system. Warming increased SOC content and accelerated fungal community temporal turnover under conservation agriculture (no tillage, chopped crop residue), but not under conventional agriculture (annual tillage, crop residue removed). Microbial carbon use efficiency (CUE) and growth increased linearly over time, with stronger positive warming effects after 5 years under conservation agriculture. According to structural equ

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-44647-4
Catalogue ID
SNmoh9mmsr-u6n2o9
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