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Research article2022Peer reviewed

Younger carbon dominates global soil carbon efflux

Xiao, Liujun; Wang, Guocheng; Wang, Mingming; Zhang, Shuai; Sierra, Carlos A.; Guo, Xiaowei; Chang, Jinfeng; Shi, Zhou; Luo, Zhongkui

Abstract

Soil carbon (C) is comprised of a continuum of organic compounds with distinct ages (i.e., the time a C atom has experienced in soil since the C atom entered soil). The contribution of different age groups to soil C efflux is critical for understanding soil C stability and persistence, but is poorly understood due to the complexity of soil C pool age structure and potential distinct turnover behaviors of age groups. Here, we build upon the quantification of soil C transit times to infer the age of C atoms in soil C efflux (a(efflux)) from seven sequential soil layer depths down to 2 m at a global scale, and compare this age with radiocarbon-inferred ages of C retained in corresponding soil layers (a(soil)). In the whole 0-2 m soil profile, the mean a(efflux) is 194211021 (mean with 5%-95% quantiles) year and is just about one-eighth of a(soil) (14767172547 year), demonstrating that younger C dominates soil C efflux. With increasing soil depth, both a(efflux) and a(soil) are increased, but their disparities are markedly narrowed. That is, the proportional contribution of relatively younger soil C to efflux is decreased in deeper layers, demonstrating that C inputs (new and young) stay longer in deeper layers. Across the globe, we find large spatial variability of the contribution of soil C age groups to C efflux. Especially, in deep soil layers of cold regions (e.g., boreal forests and tundra), a(efflux) may be older than a(soil), suggesting that older C dominates C efflux only under a limited range of conditions. These results imply that most C inputs may not contribute to long-term soil C storage, particularly in upper layers that hold the majority of new C inputs.

Keywords

carbon age; carbon input; carbon sequestration; deep soil; radiocarbon; soil organic carbon; transit time

Published in

Global Change Biology
2022, Volume: 28, number: 18, pages: 5587-5599
Publisher: WILEY

    Sustainable Development Goals

    SDG13 Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Soil Science

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16311

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/123387