Abstract
Abiotic efflux of CO2 from soil is often attributed to
dissolution of carbonates, and therefore not expected to occur in soils
with a low pH. However, another abiotic source of CO2,
less constrained by pH, may arise from reactions that oxidize natural
soil organic matter and reduce metal oxides. Studies of redox reactions
between phenolic compounds and Fe and Mn oxides in soil have been
focused mainly on the environmental fate of both oxidants and reductants
and formation of organic matter. We measured CO2 formed
during 3-hour, room temperature (22±2 oC), incubations
of samples of archived soils and from an ongoing crop diversity study.
Subsamples (8 g. ODE) of each soil, were treated (5 ml) with water, or
solutions of glucose (0.029 M), or gallic acid (0.025 M). For each soil,
subsamples amended with H2O or with the glucose solution
produced little CO2 and were nearly identical to each
other, while CO2 quickly formed after treatment with
gallic acid regardless of pH. The net increase in CO2
due to gallic acid, observed from the 18 archived soils, ranged from
less than 0.5 to more than 80 mg CO2-C
kg-1 soil. Significant treatment effects were observed
in samples from the crop diversity study with more (Tukey’s P≤0.05) net
CO2 from a small grain-fallow treatment compared a
5-year rotation treatment, 19.04 and 15.77 mg CO2-C
kg-1 soil, respectively. This study suggests abiotic
reactions capable of rapidly producing a burst of CO2
can occur in a wide range of soils following inputs of simple phenolic
compounds and be impacted by management regimes. We suggest these are
redox reactions in soil linked to Mn or Fe metal oxides and when
considered together with fluctuations of carbon inputs to soil and redox
cycling, might be a larger contributor to C emissions than previously
accounted for.