Gollany Hero T, Titus Brian D, Scott D Andrew, Asbjornsen Heidi, Resh Sigrid C, Chimner Rodney A, Kaczmarek Donald J, Leite Luiz F C, Ferreira Ana C C, Rod Kenton A, Hilbert Jorge, Galdos Marcelo V, Cisz Michelle E
Columbia Plateau Conservation Research Center, USDA-Agricultural Research Service, 48037 Tubbs Ranch Road, Adams, OR, 97810, USA.
Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Pacific Forestry Centre, 506 West Burnside Rd., Victoria, BC, V8Z 1M5, Canada.
Environ Manage. 2015 Dec;56(6):1330-55. doi: 10.1007/s00267-015-0536-7. Epub 2015 May 26.
Rapid expansion in biomass production for biofuels and bioenergy in the Americas is increasing demand on the ecosystem resources required to sustain soil and site productivity. We review the current state of knowledge and highlight gaps in research on biogeochemical processes and ecosystem sustainability related to biomass production. Biomass production systems incrementally remove greater quantities of organic matter, which in turn affects soil organic matter and associated carbon and nutrient storage (and hence long-term soil productivity) and off-site impacts. While these consequences have been extensively studied for some crops and sites, the ongoing and impending impacts of biomass removal require management strategies for ensuring that soil properties and functions are sustained for all combinations of crops, soils, sites, climates, and management systems, and that impacts of biomass management (including off-site impacts) are environmentally acceptable. In a changing global environment, knowledge of cumulative impacts will also become increasingly important. Long-term experiments are essential for key crops, soils, and management systems because short-term results do not necessarily reflect long-term impacts, although improved modeling capability may help to predict these impacts. Identification and validation of soil sustainability indicators for both site prescriptions and spatial applications would better inform commercial and policy decisions. In an increasingly inter-related but constrained global context, researchers should engage across inter-disciplinary, inter-agency, and international lines to better ensure the long-term soil productivity across a range of scales, from site to landscape.
美洲用于生物燃料和生物能源的生物质产量迅速增长,这对维持土壤和土地生产力所需的生态系统资源的需求也在增加。我们回顾了当前的知识状况,并突出了与生物质生产相关的生物地球化学过程和生态系统可持续性研究中的差距。生物质生产系统逐渐移除大量有机物质,这反过来又会影响土壤有机质以及相关的碳和养分储存(进而影响长期土壤生产力)和场外影响。虽然针对某些作物和土地对这些后果已进行了广泛研究,但生物质移除的持续和即将产生的影响需要管理策略,以确保土壤性质和功能在作物、土壤、土地、气候和管理系统的所有组合下都能得以维持,并且生物质管理的影响(包括场外影响)在环境上是可接受的。在不断变化的全球环境中,累积影响的知识也将变得越来越重要。长期试验对于关键作物、土壤和管理系统至关重要,因为短期结果不一定能反映长期影响,尽管改进的建模能力可能有助于预测这些影响。确定并验证适用于场地规划和空间应用的土壤可持续性指标,将为商业和政策决策提供更好的依据。在一个日益相互关联但又受限的全球背景下,研究人员应跨学科、跨机构和跨国界开展合作,以更好地确保从场地到景观等一系列尺度上的长期土壤生产力。