Citation Information

  • Title : Soil C erosion and burial in cropland.
  • Source : Global Change Biology
  • Publisher : Wiley-Blackwell
  • Volume : 18
  • Issue : 4
  • Pages : 1441-1452
  • Year : 2012
  • DOI : 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2011.02604.x
  • ISBN : 1354-1013
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Kroetsch, D.
    • Vandenbygaart, A. J.
    • Gregorich, E. G.
    • Lobb, D.
  • Climates: Warm summer continental/Hemiboreal (Dsb, Dfb, Dwb).
  • Cropping Systems:
  • Countries: Canada.

Summary

Erosion influences the lateral and vertical distribution of soil in agricultural landscapes. A better understanding of the effects of erosion and redistribution on soil organic carbon (C) within croplands would improve our knowledge of how management practices may affect global C dynamics. In this study, the vertical and lateral distribution of soil organic C was characterized to evaluate the amounts and timescales of soil organic C movement, deposition and burial over the last 50 years in different agroecosystems across Canada. There was strong evidence that a substantial portion of eroded sediment and soil organic C was deposited as colluvium close to its source area, thereby burying the original topsoil. The deepest aggraded profile was in a potato field and contained over 70 cm of deposited soil indicating an accumulation rate of 152 Mg ha yr -1; aggraded profiles in other sites had soil deposition rates of 40-90 Mg ha -1 yr -1. The largest stock of soil organic C was 463 Mg ha -1 (to 60 cm depth) and soil C deposition ranged from about 2 to 4 Mg ha -1 yr -1 across all sites. A distinct feature observed in the aggraded profiles at every site was the presence of a large increase in soil organic C concentration near the bottom of the A horizon; the concentration of this C was greater than that at the soil surface. Compared to aggraded profiles, the SOC concentration in eroded profiles did not differ with depth, suggesting that dynamic replacement of soil organic C had occurred in eroded soils. A large amount of soil organic C is buried in depositional areas of Canadian croplands; mineralization of this stock of C appears to have been constrained since burial, but it may be vulnerable to future loss by management practices, land use change and a warming climate.

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