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On June 27, 2023 at 7:11:13 AM UTC, Gravatar Claudia Guidi:
  • Updated description of Sources and turnover of soil organic matter in Pfynwald irrigation experiment from

    This dataset contains all data on which the following publication below is based. Paper Citation: Guidi, C., Lehmann, M.M., Meusburger, K., Saurer, M., Vitali, V., Peter, M., Brunner, I., Hagedorn, F. (accepted). Tracing sources and turnover of soil organic matter in a long-term irrigated dry forest using a novel hydrogen isotope approach. Soil Biology and Biochemistry. Please cite this paper together with the citation for the datafile. Data from a 17-year-long irrigation experiment (Pfynwald, Switzerland) in a naturally dry forest dominated by 100-year-old pine trees (Pinus sylvestris). Data include: (1) Isotopic composition (stable isotope ratios of non-exchangeable hydrogen δ2Hn, carbon δ13C, and nitrogen δ15N) and Hn, C and N concentrations in SOM sources (fresh Pinus sylvestris needles, litter layer, fine roots), bulk SOM (organic layer, 0-2 cm, 2-5 cm, 60-80 cm), particle-size fractions (depths: 0-2 cm, 2-5 cm; cPOM: coarse POM; fPOM: fine POM; MOM: mineral-associated organic matter); (2) Mass loss, δ2Hn values and Hn concentrations of Pinus sylvestris fine roots and needle litter (litter decomposition experiments from Herzog et al. 2019, ISME journal, and Guidi et al. 2022, Global Change Biology); (3) Relative source contribution (foliar litter, fine roots, and mycelia) to bulk SOM and fractions estimated using Bayesian mixing models (R package MixSIAR, version 3.1.12) with irrigation and depth as fixed factors. The models were informed with δ13C, δ15N and δ2Hn values and C, N, and Hn concentrations of foliar litter, roots, and mycelia as input sources. Given the kinetic isotope fractionation occurring during microbial SOM decomposition, the mixing models were informed with isotope fractionation factors, representing the isotope enrichment from sources to soils; (4) Fraction of new organic Hn (Fnew) over the irrigation period, calculated using a simple end-member mixing model according to Balesdent et al. (19) and mean residence time estimated as MRT = - t / ln (1 - Fnew), with t time in years since irrigation started and assuming single-pool model with first-order kinetics.
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    This dataset contains all data on which the following publication below is based. Paper Citation: Guidi, C., Lehmann, M.M., Meusburger, K., Saurer, M., Vitali, V., Peter, M., Brunner, I., Hagedorn, F. (accepted). Tracing sources and turnover of soil organic matter in a long-term irrigated dry forest using a novel hydrogen isotope approach. Soil Biology and Biochemistry. Please cite this paper together with the citation for the datafile. Data from a 17-year-long irrigation experiment (Pfynwald, Switzerland) in a naturally dry forest dominated by 100-year-old pine trees (Pinus sylvestris). Data include: (1) Isotopic composition (stable isotope ratios of non-exchangeable hydrogen δ2Hn, carbon δ13C, and nitrogen δ15N) and Hn, C and N concentrations in SOM sources (fresh Pinus sylvestris needles, litter layer, fine roots), bulk SOM (organic layer, 0-2 cm, 2-5 cm, 60-80 cm), particle-size fractions (depths: 0-2 cm, 2-5 cm; cPOM: coarse POM; fPOM: fine POM; MOM: mineral-associated organic matter); (2) Mass loss, δ2Hn values and Hn concentrations of Pinus sylvestris fine roots and needle litter (litter decomposition experiments from Herzog et al. 2019, ISME journal, and Guidi et al. 2022, Global Change Biology); (3) Relative source contribution (foliar litter, fine roots, and mycelia) to bulk SOM and fractions estimated using Bayesian mixing models (R package MixSIAR, version 3.1.12) with irrigation and depth as fixed factors. The models were informed with δ13C, δ15N and δ2Hn values and C, N, and Hn concentrations of foliar litter, roots, and mycelia as input sources. Given the kinetic isotope fractionation occurring during microbial SOM decomposition, the mixing models were informed with isotope fractionation factors, representing the isotope enrichment from sources to soils; (4) Fraction of new organic Hn (Fnew) over the irrigation period, calculated using a simple end-member mixing model according to Balesdent et al. (1987) and mean residence time estimated as MRT = - t / ln (1 - Fnew), with t time in years since irrigation started and assuming single-pool model with first-order kinetics.