The turnover of soil organic carbon (SOC) in grasslands can be predicted as
a function of climate, plant lignin content, texture, and kinetically defi
ned C pools. Particle-size fractionation has been used to identify soil C p
ools, This study was conducted to investigate influences of climate on the
dynamics of lignin in particle-size fractions. Composite samples mere taken
from the top 10 cm of 18 native grassland sites along temperature and prec
ipitation transects from Central Saskatoon, Canada, to South Texas, Lignin-
derived phenols were determined in the <2 mu m (clay), 2- to 20-mu m (silt)
, 20- to 250-mu m (fine sand) and 250- to 2000-mu m (coarse sand) size sepa
rates. With decreasing particle size the concentration of lignin-derived ph
enols decreased significantly from 72 g kg(-1) SOC in the coarse sand fract
ions to 12 g kg(-1) SOC in the clay fractions, Increasing phenolic acids to
aldehyde ratios indicated that side chain oxidation proceeded as particle
size decreased, Moreover, these ratios decreased in fractions <250 mu m wit
h increasing mean annual temperature (MAT) at the sites, This suggests that
the degree of lignin decomposition decreased with increasing MAT, possibly
because there was a lack of additional C sources, such as saccharides of r
oot litter, which are needed for the cometabolic decay of lignin.