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Clay illuviation provides a longterm sink for C sequestration in subsoils

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posted on 2017-05-22, 11:41 authored by Gemma Torres-Sallan, Rogier P.O. Schulte, Gary J. Lanigan, Kenneth A. Byrne, Brian Reidy, Iolanda Simo, Johan Six, Rachel E. Creamer
Soil plays a key role in the global carbon (C) cycle. Most current assessments of SOC stocks and the guidelines given by Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) focus on the top 30 cm of soil. Our research shows that, when considering only total quantities, most of the SOC stocks are found in this top layer. However, not all forms of SOC are equally valuable as long-term stable stores of carbon: the majority of SOC is available for mineralisation and can potentially be re-emitted to the atmosphere. SOC associated with micro-aggregates and silt plus clay fractions is more stable and therefore represents a long-term carbon store. Our research shows that most of this stable carbon is located at depths below 30 cm (42% of subsoil SOC is located in micro-aggregates and silt and clay, compared to 16% in the topsoil), specifically in soils that are subject to clay illuviation. This has implications for land management decisions in temperate grassland regions, defining the trade-offs between primary productivity and C emissions in clay-illuviated soils, as a result of drainage. Therefore, climate smart land management should consider the balance between SOC stabilisation in topsoils for productivity versus sequestration in subsoils for climate mitigation.

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Publication

Scientic Reports;7: 45635

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Note

peer-reviewed

Language

English

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