Potential Soil Organic Matter Turnover in Taylor Valley, Antarctica
- 1 February 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
- Vol. 37 (1) , 108-117
- https://doi.org/10.1657/1523-0430(2005)037[0108:psomti]2.0.co;2
Abstract
Antarctic Dry Valley ecosystems are among the most inhospitable soil ecosystems on earth with simple food webs and nearly undetectable fluxes of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N). Due to the lack of vascular plants, soil organic matter concentrations are extremely low, and it is unclear how much of the contemporary soil C budget is actively cycling or a legacy of paleolake production and sedimentation. While recent work indicates multiple sources of organic matter for dry valley soils, the composition and kinetics of organic pools remain poorly characterized. We examined soil organic matter pools and potential C and N turnover in soils from within six sites located across three hydrological basins of Taylor Valley, Antarctica that differed in surface age, microclimate and proximity to legacy (paleolake) sources of organic matter. We estimated potential C and N mineralization, and rate kinetics using gas exchange and repeated leaching techniques during 90-d incubations of surface soils collected from valley basin and valley slope positions in three basins of Taylor Valley. Soil organic C content was negatively correlated with the ages of underlying tills, supporting previous descriptions of legacy organic matter. Carbon and N mineralization generally followed 1st order kinetics and were well described by exponential models. Labile pools of C (90 d) were 10% of the total organic C in the upper 5 cm of the soil profile. Labile N was 50% of the total N in surface soils of Taylor Valley. These results show that a large proportion of soil C and particularly N are mineralizable under suitable conditions and suggest that a kinetically defined labile pool of organic matter is potentially active in the field during brief intervals of favorable microclimate. Climate variation changing the duration of these conditions may have potentially large effects on the small pools of C and N in these soils.This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Valley floor climate observations from the McMurdo dry valleys, Antarctica, 1986–2000Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 2002
- Surface glaciochemistry of Taylor Valley, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica and its relationship to stream chemistryHydrological Processes, 2002
- Trends in Resin and KCl-extractable Soil Nitrogen Across Landscape Gradients in Taylor Valley, AntarcticaEcosystems, 2002
- Evidence from Taylor Valley for a Grounded Ice Sheet in the Ross Sea, AntarcticaGeografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, 2000
- Radiocarbon Chronology of Ross Sea Drift, Eastern Taylor Valley, Antarctica: Evidence for a Grounded Ice Sheet in the Ross Sea at the Last Glacial MaximumGeografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, 2000
- Potential nitrogen immobilization in grassland soils across a soil organic matter gradientSoil Biology and Biochemistry, 2000
- Geochronology of Bonney Drift, Taylor Valley, Antarctica: Evidence for Interglacial Expansions of Taylor GlacierGeografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, 2000
- Genesis, properties and sensitivity of Antarctic GelisolsAntarctic Science, 1999
- Chronology of Taylor Glacier Advances in Arena Valley, Antarctica, Using in Situ Cosmogenic 3He and 10BeQuaternary Research, 1993
- Late Wisconsin and Early Holocene Glacial History, Inner Ross Embayment, AntarcticaQuaternary Research, 1989