Two features distinguishing soil organic matter simulation models are the type of kinetics used to calculate pool decomposition rates, and the algorithm used to handle the effects of nitrogen (N) shortage on carbon (C) decomposition. Compared to widely used first-order kinetics, Monod kinetics more realistically represent organic matter decomposition, because they relate decomposition to both substrate and decomposer size. Most models impose a fixed C to N ratio for microbial biomass. When N required by microbial biomass to decompose a given amount of substrate-C is larger than soil available N, carbon decomposition rates are limited proportionally to N deficit (N inhibition hypothesis). excess C, by allocating it to a storage pool of polysaccharides. We built excess C, by allocating it to a storage pool of polysaccharides. We built six models to compare the combinations of three decomposition kinetics (first-order, Monod, and reverse Monod), and two ways to simulate the effect of N shortage on C decomposition (N inhibition and C-overflow). We conducted sensitivity analysis to identify model parameters that mostly affected CO2 emissions and soil mineral N during a simulated 189-day laboratory incubation assuming constant water content and temperature. We evaluated model outputs sensitivity at differentstages of organic matter decomposition in a soil amended with three inputs of increasing C to N ratio: liquid manure, solid manure, and low-N crop residue. Only few model parameters and their interactions were responsible for consistent variations of CO2 and soil mineral N. These parameters were mostly related to microbial biomass and to the partitioning of applied C among input pools, as well as their decomposition constants. In addition, in models with Monod kinetics, CO2 was also sensitive to a variation of the half-saturation constants. C-overflow enhanced pool decomposition compared to N inhibition hypothesis when N shortage occurred. Accumulated C in the polysaccharides pool decomposed slowly; therefore model outputs were not sensitive to a variation of its decay constant. Six-month organic matter decomposition was generally higher for models implementing classical Monod kinetics, followed by models with first-order and reverse Monod kinetics, due to the effect of soil microbial biomass growth on decomposition rates. Moreover, models implementing Monod kinetics predicted positive priming effects of native organic matter after soil amendment, according to co-metabolism theory. Thus, priming was proportional to the increase of the microbial biomass and in turn to the decomposability of applied organic matter. We conclude that model calibration should focus only on the few important parameters.

Sensitivity analysis of six soil organic matter models applied to the decomposition of animal manures and crop residues / D. Cavalli, P. Marino Gallina, L. Bechini. - In: ITALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY. - ISSN 1125-4718. - 11:4(2016), pp. 217-236. ((Intervento presentato al 44. convegno SIA Congress tenutosi a Bologna nel 2015 [10.4081/ija.2016.757].

Sensitivity analysis of six soil organic matter models applied to the decomposition of animal manures and crop residues

D. Cavalli
;
P. Marino Gallina
Penultimo
;
L. Bechini
Ultimo
2016

Abstract

Two features distinguishing soil organic matter simulation models are the type of kinetics used to calculate pool decomposition rates, and the algorithm used to handle the effects of nitrogen (N) shortage on carbon (C) decomposition. Compared to widely used first-order kinetics, Monod kinetics more realistically represent organic matter decomposition, because they relate decomposition to both substrate and decomposer size. Most models impose a fixed C to N ratio for microbial biomass. When N required by microbial biomass to decompose a given amount of substrate-C is larger than soil available N, carbon decomposition rates are limited proportionally to N deficit (N inhibition hypothesis). excess C, by allocating it to a storage pool of polysaccharides. We built excess C, by allocating it to a storage pool of polysaccharides. We built six models to compare the combinations of three decomposition kinetics (first-order, Monod, and reverse Monod), and two ways to simulate the effect of N shortage on C decomposition (N inhibition and C-overflow). We conducted sensitivity analysis to identify model parameters that mostly affected CO2 emissions and soil mineral N during a simulated 189-day laboratory incubation assuming constant water content and temperature. We evaluated model outputs sensitivity at differentstages of organic matter decomposition in a soil amended with three inputs of increasing C to N ratio: liquid manure, solid manure, and low-N crop residue. Only few model parameters and their interactions were responsible for consistent variations of CO2 and soil mineral N. These parameters were mostly related to microbial biomass and to the partitioning of applied C among input pools, as well as their decomposition constants. In addition, in models with Monod kinetics, CO2 was also sensitive to a variation of the half-saturation constants. C-overflow enhanced pool decomposition compared to N inhibition hypothesis when N shortage occurred. Accumulated C in the polysaccharides pool decomposed slowly; therefore model outputs were not sensitive to a variation of its decay constant. Six-month organic matter decomposition was generally higher for models implementing classical Monod kinetics, followed by models with first-order and reverse Monod kinetics, due to the effect of soil microbial biomass growth on decomposition rates. Moreover, models implementing Monod kinetics predicted positive priming effects of native organic matter after soil amendment, according to co-metabolism theory. Thus, priming was proportional to the increase of the microbial biomass and in turn to the decomposability of applied organic matter. We conclude that model calibration should focus only on the few important parameters.
No
English
immobilisation; Michaelis- Menten kinetics; mineralisation; monod kinetics; overflow; priming effect; agricultural and biological sciences (all)
Settore AGR/02 - Agronomia e Coltivazioni Erbacee
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
   C and N Models Intercomparison and Improvement to assess management options for GHG mitigation in agrosystems worldwide
   CN-MIP
   MINISTERO DELLE POLITICHE AGRICOLE ALIMENTARI, FORESTALI E DEL TURISMO
2016
Page Press Publications
11
4
217
236
20
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
SIA Congress
Bologna
2015
44
Convegno nazionale
Intervento richiesto
scopus
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Sensitivity analysis of six soil organic matter models applied to the decomposition of animal manures and crop residues / D. Cavalli, P. Marino Gallina, L. Bechini. - In: ITALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY. - ISSN 1125-4718. - 11:4(2016), pp. 217-236. ((Intervento presentato al 44. convegno SIA Congress tenutosi a Bologna nel 2015 [10.4081/ija.2016.757].
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
3
262
Article (author)
no
D. Cavalli, P. Marino Gallina, L. Bechini
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/481440
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