Carbon sequestration and turnover in soil under the energy crop <i>Miscanthus</i>: repeated <sup>13</sup>C natural abundance approach and literature synthesis — Huadong Zang (2017) | RDL Network
Carbon sequestration and turnover in soil under the energy crop <i>Miscanthus</i>: repeated <sup>13</sup>C natural abundance approach and literature synthesis
GCB Bioenergy 10(4): 262-271
Article 2017 English
Authors
HZ
Huadong Zang
ЕB
Еvgenia Blagodatskaya
YW
Yuan Wen
Abstract
1 min read
The stability and turnover of soil organic matter ( SOM ) are a very important but poorly understood part of carbon (C) cycling. Conversion of C 3 grassland to the C 4 energy crop Miscanthus provides an ideal opportunity to quantify medium‐term SOM dynamics without disturbance (e.g., plowing), due to the natural shift in the δ 13 C signature of soil C. For the first time, we used a repeated 13 C natural abundance approach to measure C turnover in a loamy Gleyic Cambisol after 9 and 21 years of Miscanthus cultivation. This is the longest C 3 –C 4 vegetation change study on C turnover in soil under energy crops. SOM stocks under Miscanthus and reference grassland were similar down to 1 m depth. However, both increased between 9 and 21 years from 105 to 140 mg C ha −1 ( P < 0.05), indicating nonsteady state of SOM . This calls for caution when estimating SOM turnover based on a single sampling. The mean residence time ( MRT ) of old C (>9 years) increased with depth from 19 years (0–10 cm) to 30–152 years (10–50 cm), and remained stable below 50 cm. From 41 literature observations, the average SOM increase after conversion from cropland or grassland to Miscanthus was 6.4 and 0.4 mg C ha −1 , respectively. The MRT of total C in topsoil under Miscanthus remained stable at ~60 years, independent of plantation age, corroborating the idea that C dynamics are dominated by recycling processes rather than by C stabilization. In conclusion, growing Miscanthus on C‐poor arable soils caused immediate C sequestration because of higher C input and decreased SOM decomposition. However, after replacing grasslands with Miscanthus , SOM stocks remained stable and the MRT of old C 3 ‐C increased strongly with depth.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.