Assessment of depth-dependent microbial carbon use efficiency in
long-term fertilized paddy soil using an 18O-H2O approach
Abstract
Microbial biomass (MB) production and turnover strongly affect soil
organic carbon (SOC) accumulation. Microbial carbon use efficiency (CUE)
and MB turnover in paddy soil were determined using a novel
substrate-independent H218O labeling approach and the effect of
long-term fertilization with mineral (NPK) or combined (NPK+OM (manure))
amendments in 0-10, 10-20, and 20-30 cm depths were investigated.
Long-term fertilization increased microbial C uptake, CUE, and growth
rates, and all indexes were the highest in the NPK+OM treatment. The CUE
ranged between 0.07 and 0.23 and showed variable behavior with depth: it
reduced in the control treatment, indicating that more C was allocated
to energy production than biomass growth, and increased in fertilized
soils, showing the shift of C usage for biomass growth. The highest CUE
was observed at 20-30 cm in NPK and NPK+OM and indicated that
microorganisms overcome the nutrient deficiency in deep soil layers by
keeping high C uptake rates at a constant CUE. MBC turnover was more
rapid in NPK (10-70 d) and NPK+OM (40-65 d) compared to control (80 d)
and intensified with the depth. These findings highlight that under
long-term fertilization MB turnover can be controlled by CUE. These
shifts in the strategies of microorganisms functioning can explain the
accumulation of SOC in heavily fertilized paddy soils.