Bp. Degens et Gp. Sparling, REPEATED WET-DRY CYCLES DO NOT ACCELERATE THE MINERALIZATION OF ORGANIC C INVOLVED IN THE MACRO-AGGREGATION OF A SANDY LOAM SOIL, Plant and soil, 175(2), 1995, pp. 197-203
Repeated mild wet-dry cycles were imposed on a sandy loam to accelerat
e the mineralization of organic C involved in stabilising macro-aggreg
ates. Soil maintained continually moist (control soil) was compared to
that subjected to a series of 6 wet-dry cycles. Two patterns of rewet
ting and drying were investigated: (1) incubated dry at 25 degrees C f
or six days between each wet-dry cycle (dry-incubated), or (ii) incuba
ted moist for six days at 25 degrees C between each cycle (moist-incub
ated). Changes in the proportion of >2 mm, 1-2 mm, 0.5-1 mm and 0.25-0
.5 mm aggregates, and carbohydrate C extracted by hot-water or hot-1.5
M H2SO4, were measured after each wet-dry cycle, or weekly in the con
tinuously moist control soil. Respiration rates (CO2 efflux) were meas
ured during the incubation of the moist soil between the wet-dry cycle
s and compared with the continually-moist control soil. The wet-dry tr
eatments did not increase soil respiration in soil after re-wetting co
mpared to soil kept continually moist and incubated for the same perio
d of time. Despite this, the treatments caused changes in the amounts
of acid- and water-extractable carbohydrate C fractions and substantia
l changes in aggregation. Macro-aggregation and the proportion of soil
in each fraction did not change in the soil maintained continuously-m
oist for 6 weeks (control). However, effects of the two wet-dry treatm
ents on total macro-aggregation were similar to those in the >2 mm, 1-
2 mm and 0.25-0.5 mm aggregate fractions: there was a rapid decline in
aggregation by 48-65% over the first two cycles, a sharp recovery to
78-100% of the initial aggregation after three cycles, and a further d
ecline after 4-6 cycles. The resistance of organic C mineralization to
mild wet-dry cycles confirmed that the organic C in this soil is very
stable and resistant to decomposition. Despite aggregates being disru
pted, the organic C stabilising these aggregates was resistant to deco
mposition as determined by CO2 efflux. When soil was re-moistened and
incubated to allow microbial re-colonization, aggregation was similar
to that in the soil where microbial re-colonization was limited by rap
id drying treatments. Short term changes in the aggregation of this so
il appear to be dominated by chemical and/or physical processes.