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The potential to increase soil carbon stocks through reduced tillage or organic material additions in England and Wales: A case study

Authors :
Powlson, D.S.
Bhogal, A.
Chambers, B.J.
Coleman, K.
Macdonald, A.J.
Goulding, K.W.T.
Whitmore, A.P.
Source :
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment. Jan2012, Vol. 146 Issue 1, p23-33. 11p.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Abstract: Results from the UK were reviewed to quantify the impact on climate change mitigation of soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks as a result of (1) a change from conventional to less intensive tillage and (2) addition of organic materials including farm manures, digested biosolids, cereal straw, green manure and paper crumble. The average annual increase in SOC deriving from reduced tillage was 310kg C±180kgCha−1 yr−1. Even this accumulation of C is unlikely to be achieved in the UK and northwest Europe because farmers practice rotational tillage. N2O emissions may increase under reduced tillage, counteracting increases in SOC. Addition of biosolids increased SOC (inkgCha−1 yr−1 t−1 dry solids added) by on average 60±20 (farm manures), 180±24 (digested biosolids), 50±15 (cereal straw), 60±10 (green compost) and an estimated 60 (paper crumble). SOC accumulation declines in long-term experiments (>50 yr) with farm manure applications as a new equilibrium is approached. Biosolids are typically already applied to soil, so increases in SOC cannot be regarded as mitigation. Large increases in SOC were deduced for paper crumble (>6tCha−1 yr−1) but outweighed by N2O emissions deriving from additional fertiliser. Compost offers genuine potential for mitigation because application replaces disposal to landfill; it also decreases N2O emission. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01678809
Volume :
146
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
69952143
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2011.10.004