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Can highly weathered soils under conservation agriculture be C saturated?

Authors :
Florent Tivet
Julio Cezar Franchini
Daiani da Cruz Hartman
João Carlos de Moraes Sá
Juliane Zuffo dos Santos
Rafael Schimiguel
Rattan Lal
Ademir de Oliveira Ferreira
Clever Briedis
Source :
Catena
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Soil organic carbon (SOC) plays an essential function in global agroecosystems. Conservation agriculture (CA) associated with diverse and high C-input is an important tool to increase SOC, improve soil quality, and increase agronomic productivity. However, the information about the potential of highly weathered soils under CA to accumulate SOC, and when the SOC saturation may occur, is scarce. This study was based on the hypothesis that in highly weathered soil from tropical and subtropical agro-ecosystems, the potential to store SOC lies more in the sub-soil than in surface layers and is determined by nutrient scarcity. Thus, the aim of this study, performed in a long-term incubation experiment (30 months), was to: (i) assess the SOC flow and mineralization based on CO 2 -C emissions for estimating SOC accumulation; (ii) evaluate the impact of nutrient scarcity on C accumulation efficiency by soil layers; and (iii) determine when C saturation occurs in these soils. The incubation study was performed in three Brazilian Oxisols under long-term CA, and was comprised of four amounts of C-inputs (0, 6, 12 and 24 Mg C ha − 1 ) added at 0, 10 and 20-months to three soil layers (0–20, 20–40 and 40–100 cm). The CO 2 -C emission was 19.0, 9.0 and 7.0% higher in the 0–20 cm than that in 40–100 cm layer for Ponta Grossa, Londrina and Lucas do Rio Verde sites, respectively, which was associated with higher antecedent SOC content and fertility status. A higher SOC accumulation efficiency was observed for the 0–20 cm layer than in deeper layers. Nutrient scarcity in deep soil layers; especially that of P, Ca 2 + and Mg 2 + ; was the driving force limiting SOC accumulation. Carbon saturation was not achieved indicating a high SOC storage capacity in these soils. Because these and similar soils cover a large global area, they possess a large C sink to mitigate atmospheric CO 2 -C . The potential SOC storage estimated for 20–100 cm layer based on this study and upscaling for 1/3 Brazilian Oxisols (100 million ha) may offset 0.06 to 0.36 Pg C yr − 1 or 5.5% to 32.7% of the global annual greenhouse gas emissions by land use change.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Catena
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7782dd7aab4f75463b7ef643a7653ac5