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Comparison of forest soil carbon dynamics at five sites along a latitudinal gradient
Authors:Charles T Garten
Institution:1. Institute for Integrated Natural Sciences, University of Koblenz-Landau, Universitätsstraße 1, 56070 Koblenz, Germany;2. Rhineland-Palatinate Centre of Excellence for Climate Change Impacts, Hauptstraße 16, 67705 Trippstadt, Germany;3. Geoecology, University of Tübingen, Rümelinstraße 19-23, 72070 Tübingen, Germany;1. SUMAS Research Group, Department of Agricultural Chemistry and Soil Science, Faculty of Science, Agrifood Campus of International Excellence - ceiA3, University of Cordoba, 14071 Cordoba, Spain;2. The University of Western Australia, School of Plant Biology, Crawley 6009, WA, Australia;3. Kings Park and Botanic Garden, Kings Park, Perth 6005, WA, Australia
Abstract:The aim of this study was to compare the turnover time of labile soil carbon (C), in relation to temperature and soil texture, in several forest ecosystems that are representative of large areas of North America. Carbon and nitrogen (N) stocks, and C:N ratios, were measured in the forest floor, mineral soil, and two mineral soil fractions (particulate and mineral-associated organic matter, POM and MOM, respectively) at five AmeriFlux sites along a latitudinal gradient in the eastern United States. Sampling at four sites was replicated over two consecutive years. With one exception, forest floor and mineral soil C stocks increased from warm, southern sites (with fine-textured soils) to cool, northern sites (with more coarse-textured soils). The exception was a northern site, with less than 10% silt-clay content, that had a soil organic C stock similar to the southern sites. A two-compartment model was used to calculate the turnover time of labile soil organic C (MRTU) and the annual transfer of labile C to stable C (k2) at each site. Moving from south to north, MRTU increased from approximately 5 to 14 years. Carbon-13 enrichment factors (ε), that described the rate of change in δ13C through the soil profile, were associated with soil C turnover times. Consistent with its role in stabilization of soil organic C, silt-clay content was positively correlated (r = 0.91; P  0.001) with parameter k2. Latitudinal differences in the storage and turnover of soil C were related to mean annual temperature (MAT, °C), but soil texture superseded temperature when there was too little silt and clay to stabilize labile soil C and protect it from decomposition. Each site had a relatively high proportion of labile soil C (nearly 50% to a depth of 20 cm). Depending on unknown temperature sensitivities, large labile pools of forest soil C are at risk of decomposition in a warming climate, and losses could be disproportionately higher from coarse textured forest soils.
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