Crop rotation and the impact on soil carbon in the U.S. Corn Belt

IF 5.8 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Carbon Balance and Management Pub Date : 2025-04-26 DOI:10.1186/s13021-025-00293-5
Yining Wu, Eric C. Davis, Brent L. Sohngen
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Abstract

Soils are receiving increasing attention as carbon sinks that can reduce atmospheric CO2. While common Best Management Practices (BMP), such as cover crops, reduced or minimum tillage, and advanced nutrient management, have been considered as alternatives to build soil carbon storage in managed crop fields, crop-species choices have often been overlooked. This paper uses the Rapid Carbon Assessment (RaCA) data from U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), to examine how the rotation of two of the most widely used crops in the U.S., corn and soybeans, influences Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) stocks. We show that at the depths of 0 to 100 cm, corn is correlated with a higher level of SOC stocks than soybeans, and the more years that corn is cultivated the higher the SOC stocks. Specifically, an additional year of corn planted every 3 years is estimated to increase SOC stocks at depths of 0 to 100 cm by 25.1%. Based on our analysis, were all the land in the U.S. states of Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, and Illinois that are currently either mono-cropped with soybeans or follow some sort of soybean-corn rotation converted to corn mono-cropping, the estimated gain in SOC would be 896.7 million Mg C (1 Megagram = 1 ton). This represents a theoretical upper limit for SOC improvements. If current rotational practices were shifted such that corn was planted in 2 of every 3 years in the same region, the theoretical increase in SOC stocks is estimated to be 172.9 million Mg C. Multiplying this result by a Social Cost of Carbon priced at $678/t C in 2020 U.S. dollars (Rennert et al. in Nature 610:687–692, 2022), the total benefits are estimated at $117 billion.

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美国玉米带作物轮作及其对土壤碳的影响
土壤作为可以减少大气中二氧化碳的碳汇正受到越来越多的关注。虽然普遍的最佳管理实践(BMP),如覆盖作物、减少或最少耕作以及先进的养分管理,已经被认为是在受管理的农田中建立土壤碳储存的替代方案,但作物物种的选择往往被忽视。本文利用美国农业部(USDA)的快速碳评估(RaCA)数据,研究了美国两种最广泛使用的作物玉米和大豆的轮作如何影响土壤有机碳(SOC)储量。结果表明,在0 ~ 100 cm深度,玉米与土壤有机碳库存量的相关性高于大豆,且玉米种植年限越长,土壤有机碳库存量越高。具体而言,每3年多种植一年玉米,估计可使0至100厘米深度的有机碳储量增加25.1%。根据我们的分析,如果美国俄亥俄州、印第安纳州、爱荷华州和伊利诺伊州的所有土地目前都是大豆单作,或者采用某种大豆-玉米轮作转变为玉米单作,那么估计SOC的收益将为8.967亿毫克碳(1兆克= 1吨)。这代表了SOC改进的理论上限。如果改变目前的轮作做法,使同一地区每3年有2年种植玉米,那么碳储量的理论增长估计为1.729亿毫克碳。将这一结果乘以以2020年美元计价的碳社会成本为678美元/吨碳(Rennert et al. in Nature 610:687 - 692,2022),总收益估计为1170亿美元。
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来源期刊
Carbon Balance and Management
Carbon Balance and Management Environmental Science-Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Carbon Balance and Management is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal that encompasses all aspects of research aimed at developing a comprehensive policy relevant to the understanding of the global carbon cycle. The global carbon cycle involves important couplings between climate, atmospheric CO2 and the terrestrial and oceanic biospheres. The current transformation of the carbon cycle due to changes in climate and atmospheric composition is widely recognized as potentially dangerous for the biosphere and for the well-being of humankind, and therefore monitoring, understanding and predicting the evolution of the carbon cycle in the context of the whole biosphere (both terrestrial and marine) is a challenge to the scientific community. This demands interdisciplinary research and new approaches for studying geographical and temporal distributions of carbon pools and fluxes, control and feedback mechanisms of the carbon-climate system, points of intervention and windows of opportunity for managing the carbon-climate-human system. Carbon Balance and Management is a medium for researchers in the field to convey the results of their research across disciplinary boundaries. Through this dissemination of research, the journal aims to support the work of the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) and to provide governmental and non-governmental organizations with instantaneous access to continually emerging knowledge, including paradigm shifts and consensual views.
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