Siyao Xia, Xiaoying Jin, Xiayan Liu, Xiao Wang, Ting Liao, Zhanlonggang Yu, Ji Li, Zhangliu Du
Accepted: 2026-04-29
While composted manure application typically boosts soil organic carbon (SOC) levels, the detailed understanding of its biochemistry at the molecular level remains largely unexplored. Here, we employed three biomarkers - free lipids, lignin phenols, and amino sugars, to characterize the changes in SOC biochemistry (i.e., composition, origins and degradation) after three decades of manure application in the Northern China Plain. Topsoil samples (0-20 cm) were collected from six treatments: control (CK), mineral fertilizers alone (NPK), low and high rates of traditional composted manures (TraMl and TraMh, with 7.5 and 15 t ha-1 yr-1), and low and high rates of bio-composted manures (BioMl and BioMh, with 7.5 and 15 t ha-1 yr-1). Results showed that TraMl, TraMh, BioMl, and BioMh increased SOC concentrations by 28%, 31%, 24%, and 47%, respectively, compared to CK. These compost treatments showed higher levels of plant-derived lipids (long-chain ≥C20 and steroids) by 73%, 128%, 100%, and 156%, and microbial-derived lipids (short-chain <C20 and simple sugars) by 54%, 110%, 86%, and 149% in TraMl, TraMh, BioMl, and BioMh compared to the control. Moreover, TraMl, TraMh, BioMl, and BioMh enhanced lignin phenols by 68%, 89%, 78%, and 109%, respectively, relative to control. The bacterial, fungal, and total microbial necromass ranked as BioMh>TraMh>BioMl≈TraMl>NPK>CK, highlighting the superior efficacy of microbial-derived components in bio-compost amended soils. Collectively, the application of composted manures, particularly bio-composts, can boost SOC levels through plant and microbial-derived biomolecules, providing a more efficient composting strategy for carbon sequestration and persistence in cropland soils.