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Ecosystem productivity has a stronger influence than soil age on surface soil carbon storage across global biomes

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Ecosystem productivity has a stronger influence than soil age on surface soil carbon storage across global biomes

C. Plaza, P. García-palacios, et al.

This groundbreaking study by César Plaza, Pablo García-Palacios, and their colleagues reveals that ecosystem productivity plays a more critical role than soil age in determining soil carbon fractions across diverse global ecosystems. The findings stress the need to protect productive ecosystems to maintain vital soil carbon reserves.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Interactions between soil organic matter and minerals largely govern the carbon sequestration capacity of soils. Yet, variations in the proportions of free light (unprotected) and mineral-associated (protected) carbon as soil develops in contrasting ecosystems are poorly constrained. Here, we studied 16 long-term chronosequences from six continents and found that the ecosystem type is more important than soil age (centuries to millennia) in explaining the proportion of unprotected and mineral-associated carbon fractions in surface soils across global biomes. Soil carbon pools in highly productive tropical and temperate forests were dominated by the unprotected carbon fraction and were highly vulnerable to reductions in ecosystem productivity and warming. Conversely, soil carbon in low productivity, drier and colder ecosystems was dominated by mineral-protected carbon, and was less responsive to warming. Our findings emphasize the importance of conserving ecosystem productivity to protect carbon stored in surface soils.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Oct 07, 2022
Authors
César Plaza, Pablo García-Palacios, Asmeret Asefaw Berhe, Jesús Barquero, Felipe Bastida, G. Kenny Png, Ana Rey, Richard D. Bardgett, Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo
Tags
ecosystem type
soil carbon
chronosequences
productivity
soil age
carbon fractions
tropical forests
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