根据气候变暖和黄土流域土壤含水量预测土壤有机碳流失量

IF 3.9 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Carbon Balance and Management Pub Date : 2021-08-16 DOI:10.1186/s13021-021-00187-2
Fubo Zhao, Yiping Wu, Jinyu Hui, Bellie Sivakumar, Xianyong Meng, Shuguang Liu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景土壤有机碳(SOC)在全球碳循环和陆地生态系统功能中发挥着至关重要的作用。众所周知,气候变化和土壤含水量(SWC)会影响土壤有机碳的动态变化;然而,关于气候变化(尤其是气候变暖)和土壤含水量对土壤有机碳的影响仍存在争议。我们利用水文生物地球化学耦合模型(SWAT-DayCent)和三种代表性气候途径(RCPs2.6、4.5 和 8.5)下的气候情景数据,研究了 SOC 的时空变化及其对气候变暖和根区 SWC 变化的响应。结果未来时期(2017-2099 年)气温将显著升高,而年降水量将比基准期(1976-2016 年)增加 2.0-13.1%,表明未来泾河流域将更加温暖湿润。在降水变化的驱动下,根区的 SWC 也将增加(在 RCP4.5 条件下,与基线相比最多增加 27.9%);然而,在未来气候变暖的情况下,SOC 预计将显著减少。在 RCP2.6 和 8.5 条件下,气候变暖和 SWC 变化的综合效应可以更合理地解释 SOC 的损失,这就形成了 SOC 损失与气候变暖-SWC 交互作用之间的驼峰形响应面,有助于解释 SWC 变化对 SOC 的不同变暖效应。SOC损失对气候变暖和SWC变化的驼峰形响应表明,SWC可以调节气候变暖对SOC损失的影响,但这种调节作用主要取决于SWC的变化幅度(土壤条件更干燥或更潮湿)。这种SWC对SOC影响的中介机制对于黄土高原在气候变暖条件下提高土壤固碳能力具有重要价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Projected soil organic carbon loss in response to climate warming and soil water content in a loess watershed

Background

Soil organic carbon (SOC) plays a crucial role in the global carbon cycle and terrestrial ecosystem functions. It is widely known that climate change and soil water content (SWC) could influence the SOC dynamics; however, there are still debates about how climate change, especially climate warming, and SWC impact SOC. We investigated the spatiotemporal changes in SOC and its responses to climate warming and root-zone SWC change using the coupled hydro-biogeochemical model (SWAT-DayCent) and climate scenarios data derived under the three Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs2.6, 4.5, and 8.5) from five downscaled Global Climate Models (GCMs) in a typical loess watershed––the Jinghe River Basin (JRB) on the Chinese Loess Plateau.

Results

The air temperature would increase significantly during the future period (2017–2099), while the annual precipitation would increase by 2.0–13.1% relative to the baseline period (1976–2016), indicating a warmer and wetter future in the JRB. Driven by the precipitation variation, the root-zone SWC would also increase (by up to 27.9% relative to the baseline under RCP4.5); however, the SOC was projected to decrease significantly under the future warming climate. The combined effects of climate warming and SWC change could more reasonably explain the SOC loss, and this formed hump-shaped response surfaces between SOC loss and warming-SWC interactions under both RCP2.6 and 8.5, which can help explain diverse warming effects on SOC with changing SWC.

Conclusions

The study showed a significant potential carbon source under the future warmer and wetter climate in the JRB, and the SOC loss was largely controlled by future climate warming and the root-zone SWC as well. The hump-shaped responses of the SOC loss to climate warming and SWC change demonstrated that the SWC could mediate the warming effects on SOC loss, but this mediation largely depended on the SWC changing magnitude (drier or wetter soil conditions). This mediation mechanism about the effect of SWC on SOC would be valuable for enhancing soil carbon sequestration in a warming climate on the Loess Plateau.

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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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