Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YQ, UK.
Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Lancaster Environment Centre, Library Avenue, Bailrigg, Lancaster, LA1 4AP, UK.
Glob Chang Biol. 2016 Aug;22(8):2929-38. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13246. Epub 2016 May 9.
The importance of managing land to optimize carbon sequestration for climate change mitigation is widely recognized, with grasslands being identified as having the potential to sequester additional carbon. However, most soil carbon inventories only consider surface soils, and most large-scale surveys group ecosystems into broad habitats without considering management intensity. Consequently, little is known about the quantity of deep soil carbon and its sensitivity to management. From a nationwide survey of grassland soils to 1 m depth, we show that carbon in grassland soils is vulnerable to management and that these management effects can be detected to considerable depth down the soil profile, albeit at decreasing significance with depth. Carbon concentrations in soil decreased as management intensity increased, but greatest soil carbon stocks (accounting for bulk density differences), were at intermediate levels of management. Our study also highlights the considerable amounts of carbon in subsurface soil below 30 cm, which is missed by standard carbon inventories. We estimate grassland soil carbon in Great Britain to be 2097 Tg C to a depth of 1 m, with ~60% of this carbon being below 30 cm. Total stocks of soil carbon (t ha(-1) ) to 1 m depth were 10.7% greater at intermediate relative to intensive management, which equates to 10.1 t ha(-1) in surface soils (0-30 cm), and 13.7 t ha(-1) in soils from 30 to 100 cm depth. Our findings highlight the existence of substantial carbon stocks at depth in grassland soils that are sensitive to management. This is of high relevance globally, given the extent of land cover and large stocks of carbon held in temperate managed grasslands. Our findings have implications for the future management of grasslands for carbon storage and climate mitigation, and for global carbon models which do not currently account for changes in soil carbon to depth with management.
管理土地以优化碳固存从而缓解气候变化的重要性已得到广泛认可,草原被认为具有额外固碳的潜力。然而,大多数土壤碳储量仅考虑表层土壤,而且大多数大规模调查将生态系统分为广泛的栖息地,而不考虑管理强度。因此,人们对深层土壤碳的数量及其对管理的敏感性知之甚少。通过对全国草原土壤进行的 1 米深度调查,我们表明草原土壤中的碳容易受到管理的影响,并且这些管理效应可以在土壤剖面的相当深度上检测到,尽管随着深度的增加,其显著性会降低。随着管理强度的增加,土壤中的碳浓度降低,但在中等管理水平下,土壤碳储量最大(考虑到体密度差异)。我们的研究还突出了 30 厘米以下地下土壤中相当数量的碳,这是标准碳储量所忽略的。我们估计英国草原土壤碳储量为 2097 太吨碳,深度为 1 米,其中约 60%的碳位于 30 厘米以下。与集约管理相比,中等管理的土壤碳总储量(t ha(-1))增加了 10.7%,这相当于表层土壤(0-30 厘米)的 10.1 吨碳 ha(-1)和 30-100 厘米深度土壤的 13.7 吨碳 ha(-1)。我们的研究结果表明,草原土壤在深度上存在大量对管理敏感的碳储量。鉴于温带管理草原的土地覆盖范围和大量碳储量,这在全球范围内具有重要意义。我们的研究结果对未来的草原碳储存和气候缓解管理以及目前不考虑管理对土壤碳深度变化的全球碳模型具有重要意义。