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Soil carbon sequestration in a pine forest after 9 years of atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> enrichment

94

Citations

58

References

2008

Year

Abstract

Abstract The impact of anthropogenic CO 2 emissions on climate change may be mitigated in part by C sequestration in terrestrial ecosystems as rising atmospheric CO 2 concentrations stimulate primary productivity and ecosystem C storage. Carbon will be sequestered in forest soils if organic matter inputs to soil profiles increase without a matching increase in decomposition or leaching losses from the soil profile, or if the rate of decomposition decreases because of increased production of resistant humic substances or greater physical protection of organic matter in soil aggregates. To examine the response of a forest ecosystem to elevated atmospheric CO 2 concentrations, the Duke Forest Free‐Air CO 2 Enrichment (FACE) experiment in North Carolina, USA, has maintained atmospheric CO 2 concentrations 200 μL L −1 above ambient in an aggrading loblolly pine ( Pinus taeda ) plantation over a 9‐year period (1996–2005). During the first 6 years of the experiment, forest‐floor C and N pools increased linearly under both elevated and ambient CO 2 conditions, with significantly greater accumulations under the elevated CO 2 treatment. Between the sixth and ninth year, forest‐floor organic matter accumulation stabilized and C and N pools appeared to reach their respective steady states. An additional C sink of ∼30 g C m −2 yr −1 was sequestered in the forest floor of the elevated CO 2 treatment plots relative to the control plots maintained at ambient CO 2 owing to increased litterfall and root turnover during the first 9 years of the study. Because we did not detect any significant elevated CO 2 effects on the rate of decomposition or on the chemical composition of forest‐floor organic matter, this additional C sink was likely related to enhanced litterfall C inputs. We also failed to detect any statistically significant treatment effects on the C and N pools of surface and deep mineral soil horizons. However, a significant widening of the C : N ratio of soil organic matter (SOM) in the upper mineral soil under both elevated and ambient CO 2 suggests that N is being transferred from soil to plants in this aggrading forest. A significant treatment × time interaction indicates that N is being transferred at a higher rate under elevated CO 2 ( P =0.037), suggesting that enhanced rates of SOM decomposition are increasing mineralization and uptake to provide the extra N required to support the observed increase in primary productivity under elevated CO 2 .

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