Project Type: Research and Education
Funds awarded in 2022: $249,738.00
Projected End Date: 10/31/2025
Host Institution Award ID: H009987615
Grant Recipient:
UW-Madison
Region: North Central
State: Wisconsin
Project Coordinator:
Dr. Gregg Sanford
UW-Madison
Description:
Growing deep-rooted perennials has been proposed to increase soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks and mitigate CO2 emissions. Yet, we know little about the bioavailability and chemical properties of SOC under deep-rooted perennials and shallow-rooted annuals. Improving our understanding of the role of deep-rooted perennials for belowground C storage is critical, as root growth has the potential to both increase SOC stock and accelerate loss of existing SOC. Here, we assessed the effects of >10 years of land conversion from shallow-rooted annuals (maize) to deep-rooted perennials (switchgrass) on SOC bioavailability (microbial respiration, Δ14C-CO2), mineral-associated SOC (density fractionation), and SOC turnover and composition (14C-SOC, DRIFT spectroscopy) in surface soils (0–20 cm) and subsoils (90–120 cm) at two sites with sandy and silty soils. We demonstrate that switchgrass enhanced microbial respiration of recently-fixed C in surface soils. Switchgrass increased Δ14C values of the free light fraction in subsoil of the sandy site, by supplying aliphatic C (putative simple plant C) into the soil. In contrast, maize input less root C into the soil, and at one site increased the decomposition of older SOC, which indicates that overall microbial C demand outpaced plant C inputs. These results highlight that deep-rooted perennials stimulate the transfer of more atmospheric C to both surface and subsoils than shallow-rooted annuals, that newly generated SOC under deep-rooted perennials is relatively less protected from decomposition, and that reaping the C benefits of deep-rooted perennials could require maintaining the land cover as a perennial cropping system.
Type:
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
File:
Download file (PDF)
Target audiences:
Educators; Researchers
This product is associated with the project "The Soil Organic Carbon network (SOCnet): Farmers building soil assets to help mitigate and adapt to climate change in the North Central US"
Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and should not be construed to represent any official USDA or U.S. Government determination or policy.