Building and protecting soil organic carbon (SOC) are critical to agricultural productivity, soil health, and climate change mitigation. We aim to understand how mechanisms at the organo-mineral interfaces influence SOC persistence in three contrasting soils (Luvisol, Vertisol, and Calcisol) under long-term free air CO2 enrichment conditions. A continuous wheat-field pea-canola rotation was maintained. For the first time, we provided evidence to a novel notion that persistent SOC is molecularly simple even under elevated CO2 conditions. We found that the elevated CO2 condition did not change the total SOC content or C forms compared with the soils under ambient CO2 as identified by synchrotron-based soft X-ray analyses. Furthermore, synchrotron-based infrared microspectroscopy confirmed a two-dimensional microscale distribution of similar and less diverse C forms in intact microaggregates under long-term elevated CO2 conditions. Strong correlations between the distribution of C forms and O-H groups of clays can explain the steady state of the total SOC content. However, the correlations between C forms and clay minerals were weakened in the coarse-textured Calcisol under long-term elevated CO2. Our findings suggested that we should emphasize identifying management practices that increase the physical protection of SOC instead of increasing complexity of C. Such information is valuable in developing more accurate C prediction models under elevated CO2 conditions and shift our thinking in developing management practices for maintaining and building SOC for better soil fertility and future environmental sustainability.
Funding
The Australian Grains Free Air CO2 Enrichment program including SoilFACE was jointly run by Agriculture Victoria with the University of Melbourne and funding from the Grains Research and Development Corporation and the Australian Government Department of Agriculture and Water Resources. We gratefully acknowledge Mel Munn, Roger Perris, Liana Warren, and Russel Argall and team (Agriculture Victoria) for management of the SoilFACE experiment, Mahabubur Mollah (Agriculture Victoria) for running the FACE experiment. The work was supported by Australian Research Council (DP210100775). Part of this research was undertaken on the Soft X-ray spectroscopy beamline and the Infrared microspectroscopy beamline at the Australian Synchrotron, part of ANSTO (grant numbers AS1_SXR_15754 and AS1_IRM_15940). We thank the beamline scientists, Drs Bruce Cowie and Lars Thomsen, for their technical support on the NEXAFS analysis and Drs Mark Tobin, Annaleise Klein, and Jitraporn (Pimm) Vongsvivut, for their technical support on the IRM analysis. We appreciate the cryo-ultramicrotome sectioning of aggregates by Dr Julian Ratcliffe, Bioimaging Platform, La Trobe University. Part of the research was funded by La Trobe University’s Research Focus Area in Securing Food, Water and the Environment (Grant Ready: SFWE RFA 2000004295; Collaboration Ready: SFWE RFA 2000004349). We appreciate the funding of Universities Australia and DAAD (Application ID: 57600933) under the 2021 Australia-Germany Joint Research Co-operation Scheme for the development of image processing pipeline.