Changes in soil organic carbon,nitrogen, pH and bulk density with the development of larch (Larix gmelinii) plantations in China |
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Authors: | WANG WEN‐JIE QIU LING ZU YUAN‐GANG SU DONG‐XUE AN JING WANG HONG‐YAN ZHENG GUAN‐YU SUN WEI CHEN XI‐QUAN |
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Affiliation: | 1. Key Laboratory of Forest Plant Ecology, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin 150040, China;2. Forestry College, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin 150040, China |
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Abstract: | Under the government of China's environmental program known as Returning Farmland To Forests (RFTF), about 28 million hectares of farmland have been converted to tree plantation. This has led to a large accumulation of biomass carbon, but less is known about underground carbon‐related processes. One permanent plot (25 years of observation) and four chronosequence plot series comprising 159 plots of larch (Larix gmelinii) plantations in northeastern China were studied. Both methods found significant soil organic carbon (SOC) accumulation (96.4 g C m?2 yr?1) and bulk density decrease (5.7 mg cm?3 yr?1) in the surface soil layer (0–20 cm), but no consistent changes in deeper layers, indicating that larch planting under the RFTF program can increase SOC storage and improve the physical properties of surface soil. Nitrogen depletion (4.1–4.3 g m?2 yr?1), soil acidification (0.007–0.022 pH units yr?1) and carbon/nitrogen (C/N) ratio increase (0.16–0.46 per year) were observed in lessive soil, whereas no significant changes were found in typical dark‐brown forest soil. This SOC accumulation rate (96.4 g m?2 yr?1) can take 39% of the total carbon sink capacity [net ecosystem exchange (NEE)] of larch forests in this region and the total soil carbon sequestration could be 87 Tg carbon within 20 years of plantation by approximating all larch plantations in northeastern China (4.5 Mha), showing the importance of soil carbon accumulation in the ecosystem carbon balance. By comparison with the rates of these processes in agricultural use, the RFTF program of reversing land use for agriculture will rehabilitate SOC, soil fertility and bulk density slowly (< 69% of the depletion rate in agricultural use), so that a much longer duration is needed to rehabilitate the underground function of soil via the RFTF program. Global forest plantations on abandoned farmland or function to protecting farmland are of steady growth and our findings may be important for understanding their underground carbon processes. |
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Keywords: | chronosequences constant mass correction Larix gmelinii plantations long‐term permanent plot power analysis returning farmland to forests SOC accumulation soil bulk density soil nitrogen soil pH |
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