The turnover of organic matter in soil

Jenkinson, David, Andrew, S., Lynch, J., Goss, M. J. and Tinker, P. B. (1990) The turnover of organic matter in soil. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 329 (1255). pp. 361-368.
Copy

Although the decomposition of plant material in soil is an extremely complex process, relatively simple models can give good fits to the decay process. Thus a two-compartment model gives a close representation, over the first few years, of the decay of 14C-labelled plant material in soil. A model containing a single homogeneous humus compartment decomposing by a first-order process is surprisingly useful for soil organic nitrogen over periods measured in decades. More sophisticated multicompartmental models are now widely used to represent turnover in soil. One of these, the Rothamsted turnover model, is described in detail and shown to give a useful representation of data from the Rothamsted long-term field experiments.


picture_as_pdf
1902_001.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

View Download

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core OpenURL ContextObject MODS RIOXX2 XML ASCII Citation HTML Citation METS MPEG-21 DIDL OpenURL ContextObject in Span Data Cite XML
Export

Downloads