Abstract
Soil organic matter (SOM) is formed through partial decomposition and
transformation of plant litter inputs. Thus, litter chemistry is
generally regarded as the primary control over the formation efficiency
of litter-derived SOM through selective preservation of recalcitrant
litter fractions. Here we used model soils and showed that the SOM
formation efficiency was, instead, controlled by discriminative
protection of litter- and microbially-derived residues by different clay
minerals. The SOM formation efficiency was higher for vermiculite than
for kaolinite and illite because vermiculite protected more labile
litter- and fungal residues through surface adsorption than did
kaolinite or illite through pore entrapment. We developed a novel model
to quantify mineral-protection strength following litter decomposition,
and demonstrated that the mineral-protection strength explained well the
variation in the SOM formation efficiency among the model soils, and
could be predicted for a natural soil material from those of its
compositional clay mineral types and their relative abundances in the
soil. Our results provide solid evidence that soil clay mineralogy plays
a critical role in SOM formation as known in long-term SOM
stabilization, with important implications for model improvement to
predict SOM dynamics for different soil types.