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The carbon count of 2000 years of rice cultivation
Authors:Karsten Kalbitz  Klaus Kaiser  Sabine Fiedler  Angelika Kölbl  Wulf Amelung  Tino Bräuer  Zhihong Cao  Axel Don  Piet Grootes  Reinhold Jahn  Lorenz Schwark  Vanessa Vogelsang  Livia Wissing  Ingrid Kögel‐Knabner
Institution:1. Earth Surface Science, Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, Universiteit van Amsterdam, , Amsterdam, 1090 GE The Netherlands;2. Soil Sciences, Martin Luther University Halle‐Wittenberg, , Halle (Saale), 06120 Germany;3. Institute for Geography, Soil Science, Johannes Gutenberg‐Universit?t Mainz, , Mainz, 55099 Germany;4. Lehrstuhl für Bodenkunde, Center of Life and Food Sciences Weihenstephan, TU München, , Freising‐Weihenstephan, 85350 Germany;5. Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation, Soil Science and Soil Ecology, University of Bonn, , Bonn, 53115 Germany;6. Leibniz‐Laboratory for Radiometric Dating and Isotope Research, Christian Albrechts University Kiel, , Kiel, 24118 Germany;7. The Institute of Soil Science Chinese Academy of Sciences, , Nanjing, 210008 China;8. Institute of Agricultural Climate Research, Johann Heinrich von Thünen Institute, , Braunschweig, 38116 Germany;9. Institute for Geosciences, Christian Albrechts University Kiel, , Kiel, 24118 Germany
Abstract:More than 50% of the world's population feeds on rice. Soils used for rice production are mostly managed under submerged conditions (paddy soils). This management, which favors carbon sequestration, potentially decouples surface from subsurface carbon cycling. The objective of this study was to elucidate the long‐term rates of carbon accrual in surface and subsurface soil horizons relative to those of soils under nonpaddy management. We assessed changes in total soil organic as well as of inorganic carbon stocks along a 2000‐year chronosequence of soils under paddy and adjacent nonpaddy management in the Yangtze delta, China. The initial organic carbon accumulation phase lasts much longer and is more intensive than previously assumed, e.g., by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Paddy topsoils accumulated 170–178 kg organic carbon ha?1 a?1 in the first 300 years; subsoils lost 29–84 kg organic carbon ha?1 a?1 during this period of time. Subsoil carbon losses were largest during the first 50 years after land embankment and again large beyond 700 years of cultivation, due to inorganic carbonate weathering and the lack of organic carbon replenishment. Carbon losses in subsoils may therefore offset soil carbon gains or losses in the surface soils. We strongly recommend including subsoils into global carbon accounting schemes, particularly for paddy fields.
Keywords:carbon sequestration  inorganic carbon  land use  organic carbon  paddy  rice cultivation  soils  subsoils
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