Abstract
Soils of mountain regions are estimated to contain large amounts of
organic matter (OM), equivalent to stocks found in high-latitude boreal
and tundra soils. Mountain environments are also experiencing profound
changes in land management under the influence of socio-economic
pressures as well as the need to adapt to climate change, which is
occurring at a faster rate than in lowland areas. These anthropogenic
impacts are expected to strongly affect soil OM storage. Most studies of
land-use change have however focused on topsoil OM; whether similar
trends will hold true for subsoil OM remains unknown. Using Rock-Eval
pyrolysis as a proxy for soil OM dynamics, we showed that the hierarchy
of controls on OM properties and transformations varied greatly with
increasing soil depth. In the topsoil, OM properties were related to the
nature of plant inputs, their degree of in-mixing with the mineral
matrix and the occurrence of seasonal water saturation. In the subsoil
however, the foremost predictors of OM properties were geochemical
parameters. This shift in the nature of determinants of OM dynamics
indicates that shallow and deep soil OM pools should respond differently
to external forcings. Podzolic profiles showed the strongest decoupling
of topsoil and subsoil OM properties. We focused on this soil type to
specifically investigate the effects of land use on subsoil OM. We
selected field sites from the Coastal Range of British Columbia, Canada
and the Pennine Alps, Switzerland representing undisturbed and managed
forest, shrubland and pasture. Samples were analyzed for organic C
content, OM quality and reactive mineralogy. Results showed that
herbaceous cover was associated with an increase in topsoil but not
subsoil OM. In the subsoil, variations in OM content and properties were
associated with changes in reactive Al and Fe mineral phases. Overall,
our data indicate that organo-mineral and organo-metal interactions are
of prime importance to OM accumulation in the subsoil, and that
understanding the response of deep soil C stocks to land use change will
require consideration of the geochemical and mineralogical environment.
Our results further suggest that so-called reactive mineral phases may
themselves be impacted by land use, in turn affecting deep soil C
stabilization and destabilization processes.