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CHANGES IN SOIL CARBON STORAGE AFTER CULTIVATION
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1986
Year
Initial Carbon EffectSoil GasCarbon SequestrationBiogeochemistryEarth SciencePrecision AgricultureEngineeringSoil Carbon CycleLand UseCarbon FarmingSoil Organic MatterCultivated SoilSoil Carbon SequestrationInitial Carbon ContentWaste ManagementDeforestation
Previously published data from 625 paired soil samples were used to predict carbon in cultivated soil as a function of initial carbon content. A 30-cm sampling depth provided a less variable estimate (r2 = 0.9) of changes in carbon than a 15-cm sampling depth (r2 = 0.6). Regression analyses of changes in carbon storage in relation to years of cultivation confirmed that the greatest rates of change occurred in the first 20 yr. An initial carbon effect was present in all analyses: soils very low in carbon tended to gain slight amounts of carbon after cultivation, but soils high in carbon lost at least 20% during cultivation. Carbon losses from most agricultural soils are estimated to average less than 20% of initial values or less than 1.5 kg/cm2 within the top 30 cm. These estimates should not be applied to depths greater than 30 cm and would be improved with more bulk density information and equivalent sample volumes.