Turnover of soil organic matter under pasture as determined by 13C natural abundance
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Soil Research
- Vol. 28 (2) , 267-276
- https://doi.org/10.1071/sr9900267
Abstract
The change in vegetation cover from rainforest with a C3 photosynthetic pathway to grasses with C4 pathways was used to follow input rates and turnover of organic matter in a krasnozem over an 83 year period. The measurement of 613c values on soils from three depths (0.0-7.5, 7.5-15.0, 60.0-80.0 cm) indicated that charcoal was a serious contaminant in the light fractions (<1.6 Mg mW3) of all samples and should be removed. Of the two grasses studied (Paspalum dilatatum and Pennisetum clandestinum), the latter gave more input of organic matter into the 7.5-15.0 cm horizon. In the other horizons, both grasses performed equally. Organic matter within microaggregates (1.6 Mg m-3 fraction from the three depths were calculated as 60, 75 and 276 years respectively, compared with 75, 108 and 348 years for the organic matter within microaggregates from the same horizons. It is concluded that the presence of microaggregates is an important factor in stabilizing organic matter in this soil type. Some difficulties with the technique are also discussed.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spectroscopic and chemical differences in organic matter of two vertisols subjected to long periods of cultivationSoil Research, 1987
- CARBON AND NITROGEN IN THE LIGHT FRACTION OF A FOREST SOILSoil Science, 1983
- Metabolic fractionation of C13 & C12 in plantsPlant Physiology, 1961