“…The large accumulation of organic matter results from a combination of high detritus inputs associated with the generally high fertility and productivity of Andosols and from effective stabilization of SOM against decomposition. Research has shown that plantderived SOM is strongly degraded and that it is the microbial SOM fraction that contributes substantially to SOM pools in Andosols (Buurman et al, 2007). Stabilization of SOM in Andosols has been attributed to i) formation of the SOM in organo-mineral and/or organo-metallic (Al/Fe-humus) complexes (Inoue and Higashi, 1988;Nanzyo et al, 1993;Neculman et al, 2013;Percival et al, 2000;Rumpel et al, 2012;Torn et al, 1997), ii) low activity of soil microorganisms due to low soil pH, Al toxicity, low base cation content, and/or P deficiency (Tokashiki and Wada, 1975;Tonneijck, 2009), iii) physical protection of the SOM in stable microaggregates characteristic of variable charge soils (Huygens et al, 2005;Baldock and Broos, 2011), iv) sorption and deactivation of exoenzymes involved in the extracellular depolymerization component of SOM decomposition (Saggar et al, 1994;Miltner and Zech, 1998), v) burial of organic-rich surface horizons by repeated additions of airfall tephra deposition, and vi) the presence of microbiallyrecalcitrant charcoal (especially in melanic epipedons) (Miyazaki et al, 2009(Miyazaki et al, , 2010Nishimura et al, 2006).…”