A millennium of arable land use – the long-term impact of tillage and water erosion on landscape-scale carbon dynamics

IF 5.8 2区 农林科学 Q1 SOIL SCIENCE Soil Pub Date : 2024-04-18 DOI:10.5194/soil-10-281-2024
Lena Katharina Öttl, Florian Wilken, Anna Juřicová, Pedro V. G. Batista, Peter Fiener
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Abstract

Abstract. In the last decades, soils and their agricultural management have received great scientific and political attention due to their potential to act as a sink of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). Agricultural management has strong potential to accelerate soil redistribution, and, therefore, it is questioned if soil redistribution processes affect this potential CO2 sink function. Most studies analysing the effect of soil redistribution upon soil organic carbon (SOC) dynamics focus on water erosion and analyse only relatively small catchments and relatively short time spans of several years to decades. The aim of this study is to widen this perspective by including tillage erosion as another important driver of soil redistribution and by performing a model-based analysis in a 200 km2 sized arable region of northeastern Germany for the period since the conversion from forest to arable land (approx. 1000 years ago). The spatially explicit soil redistribution and carbon (C) turnover model SPEROS-C was applied to simulate lateral soil and SOC redistribution and SOC turnover. The model parameterisation uncertainty was estimated by simulating different realisations of the development of agricultural management over the past millennium. The results indicate that, in young moraine areas, which are relatively dry but have been intensively used for agriculture for centuries, SOC patterns and dynamics are substantially affected by tillage-induced soil redistribution processes. To understand the landscape-scale effect of these redistribution processes on SOC dynamics, it is essential to account for long-term changes following land conversion as typical soil-erosion-induced processes, e.g. dynamic replacement, only take place after former forest soils reach a new equilibrium following conversion. Overall, it was estimated that, after 1000 years of arable land use, SOC redistribution by tillage and water results in a current-day landscape-scale C sink of up to 0.66 ‰ yr−1 of the current SOC stocks.
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耕地使用千年--耕作和水土流失对景观尺度碳动态的长期影响
摘要过去几十年来,土壤及其农业管理因其作为大气二氧化碳(CO2)汇的潜力而受到科学界和政界的高度关注。农业管理具有加速土壤再分布的强大潜力,因此,人们对土壤再分布过程是否会影响这一潜在的二氧化碳汇功能提出了质疑。大多数分析土壤再分布对土壤有机碳(SOC)动态影响的研究都侧重于水侵蚀,而且只分析相对较小的流域和相对较短的时间跨度(几年到几十年)。本研究的目的是拓宽这一视角,将耕作侵蚀作为土壤再分布的另一个重要驱动因素,并在德国东北部 200 平方公里的耕地区域内,对森林转化为耕地以来的时期(约 1000 年前)进行基于模型的分析。应用空间明确的土壤再分布和碳(C)周转模型 SPEROS-C 来模拟土壤和 SOC 的横向再分布和 SOC 的周转。通过模拟过去一千年中农业管理发展的不同情况,对模型参数的不确定性进行了估计。结果表明,在相对干旱但数百年来一直被密集用于农业的年轻冰碛地区,SOC 的模式和动态受到耕作引起的土壤再分布过程的重大影响。要了解这些再分布过程对 SOC 动态的景观尺度影响,必须考虑土地转换后的长期变化,因为典型的土壤侵蚀诱导过程(如动态置换)只有在转换后原森林土壤达到新的平衡后才会发生。总之,据估计,在耕地使用 1000 年后,耕作和水对 SOC 的重新分配会导致当前景观尺度的碳吸收汇达到当前 SOC 储量的 0.66 ‰/年-1。
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来源期刊
Soil
Soil Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Soil Science
CiteScore
10.80
自引率
2.90%
发文量
44
审稿时长
30 weeks
期刊介绍: SOIL is an international scientific journal dedicated to the publication and discussion of high-quality research in the field of soil system sciences. SOIL is at the interface between the atmosphere, lithosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere. SOIL publishes scientific research that contributes to understanding the soil system and its interaction with humans and the entire Earth system. The scope of the journal includes all topics that fall within the study of soil science as a discipline, with an emphasis on studies that integrate soil science with other sciences (hydrology, agronomy, socio-economics, health sciences, atmospheric sciences, etc.).
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