Research article2016Peer reviewedOpen access
Assessing carbon dynamics at high and low rainfall agricultural sites in the inland Pacific Northwest US using the eddy covariance method
Waldo, Sarah; Chi, Jinshu; Pressley, Shelley N.; O'Keeffe, Patrick; Pan, William L.; Brooks, Erin S.; Huggins, David R.; Stoeckle, Claudio O.; Lamb, Brian K.
Abstract
Agricultural soils have the potential to be an important carbon (C) sink with proper management. The main goal of this study was to characterize C dynamics and net C exchange over two full crop years at two sites in the inland Pacific Northwest (iPNW). The iPNW is a highly productive dryland wheat growing region. The two measurement sites represent the low- and high-end of the regional precipitation gradient (250 and 550 mm year(-1), respectively). The low rainfall site is in a winter wheat-fallow rotation, while the high rainfall site is under continuous cropping with a rotation that includes winter wheat and pulse crops. The net ecosystem exchange of CO2 (NEE) was monitored using the eddy covariance method. The winter wheat cropping years were strong CO2 sinks, with net uptake of 517 +/- 26 and 524 +/- 29 g Cm-2 year(-1) at the high- and low-rainfall sites, respectively. The fallow and pulse-crop years were close to neutral with respect to NEE, with a net uptake of 20 +/- 38 g Cm-2 year(-1) for garbanzo beans at the high rainfall site, and a net loss of 3 +/- 19 g Cm-2 year(-1) for the fallow season at the low rainfall site. Combining NEE with other carbon exchange terms, most importantly carbon import and export via seeding and harvest, gives the net ecosystem carbon balance (NECB). We found that even when harvest export was taken into account, both sites acted as net carbon sinks over the two year period: the NECB at the continuous cropping site was 202 +/- 60 g Cm-2, and the crop-fallow site had a NECB of 444 +/- 34 g Cm-2. These results present useful insights to field-scale C dynamics on finely resolved timescales. To understand the potential of soils as a long term C sink however, longer-term monitoring over multiple complete crop rotation cycles in combination with other field measurements or process-based models will be necessary. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
Keywords
Eddy covariance; Cropland; Net ecosystem exchange; Net ecosystem carbon balance; Carbon balance; Rainfall zones
Published in
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
2016, Volume: 218, pages: 25-36 Publisher: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
UKÄ Subject classification
Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences
Publication identifier
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agrformet.2015.11.018
Permanent link to this page (URI)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/89324