Data S1 ...

Priming effects of soil organic matter decomposition are essential phenomena of terrestrial carbon cycling and affect the capacity of soils to serve as sources or sinks for atmospheric CO 2 in response to fresh carbon inputs. Yet, the general direction and intensity of soil priming in terrestrial ec...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Xu, Shengwen
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: figshare 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.25603185
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_S1/25603185
Description
Summary:Priming effects of soil organic matter decomposition are essential phenomena of terrestrial carbon cycling and affect the capacity of soils to serve as sources or sinks for atmospheric CO 2 in response to fresh carbon inputs. Yet, the general direction and intensity of soil priming in terrestrial ecosystems remains under debate. A second-order meta-analysis was performed with 9296 paired observations from 363 primary studies to determine the intensity and general direction of priming effects depending on the compound type, nutrient availability, and ecosystem type. We found that fresh carbon inputs prevalently result in positive priming effects (+37%) in 97% of paired observations. Labile compounds induced higher priming effects (+73%) than complex organic compounds (+33%). Compound inputs with nutrient additions (N, P alone or together) reduced the intensity of priming effects compared to compounds without N and P. Notably, tundra, lake-beds, wetlands, and volcanic soils have much larger priming effects ...