Enhanced silicate weathering accelerates forest carbon sequestration by stimulating the soil mineral carbon pump

被引:3
|
作者
Xu, Tongtong [1 ]
Yuan, Zuoqiang [1 ]
Vicca, Sara [2 ]
Goll, Daniel S. [3 ]
Li, Guochen [4 ]
Lin, Luxiang [5 ]
Chen, Hui [6 ]
Bi, Boyuan [1 ]
Chen, Qiong [1 ]
Li, Chenlu [7 ]
Wang, Xing [8 ]
Wang, Chao [4 ]
Hao, Zhanqing [1 ]
Fang, Yunting [4 ]
Beerling, David J. [9 ]
机构
[1] Northwestern Polytech Univ, Sch Ecol & Environm, Shaanxi Key Lab Qinling Ecol Intelligent Monitorin, Xian 710129, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Antwerp, Dept Biosci Engn, Antwerp, Belgium
[3] CEA CNRS UVSQ, Lab Sci Climat & Environm, Gif Sur Yvette, France
[4] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Appl Ecol, CAS Key Lab Forest Ecol & Management, Shenyang, Peoples R China
[5] Chinese Acad Sci, CAS Key Lab Trop Forest Ecol, Xishuangbanna Trop Bot Garden, Kunming, Peoples R China
[6] Natl Forest Ecosyst Res Stn Xishuangbanna, Mengla, Peoples R China
[7] Xian Univ Architecture & Technol, Inst Interdisciplinary & Innovate Res, Xian, Peoples R China
[8] Wageningen Univ & Res, Plant Ecol & Nat Conservat, Wageningen, Netherlands
[9] Univ Sheffield, Leverhulme Ctr Climate Change Mitigat, Sch Biosci, Sheffield, England
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
carbon dioxide removal; geochemical properties; mineral-associated organic matter; silicate weathering; soil inorganic carbon; soil organic carbon stability; soil respiration; ORGANIC-MATTER; STORAGE; PRESERVATION; PROTECTION; CLIMATE; SCALE; ACID;
D O I
10.1111/gcb.17464
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Enhanced silicate rock weathering (ERW) is an emerging strategy for carbon dioxide removal (CDR) from the atmosphere to mitigate anthropogenic climate change. ERW aims at promoting soil inorganic carbon sequestration by accelerating geochemical weathering processes. Theoretically, ERW may also impact soil organic carbon (SOC), the largest carbon pool in terrestrial ecosystems, but experimental evidence for this is largely lacking. Here, we conducted a 2-year field experiment in tropical rubber plantations in the southeast of China to evaluate the effects of wollastonite powder additions (0, 0.25, and 0.5 kg m-2) on both soil organic and inorganic carbon at 0-10 cm depth. We found that ERW significantly increased the concentration of SOC and HCO3-, but the increases in SOC were four and eight times higher than that of HCO3- with low- and high-level wollastonite applications. ERW had positive effects on the accrual of organic carbon in mineral-associated organic matter (MAOM) and macroaggregate fractions, but not on particulate organic matter. Path analysis suggested that ERW increased MAOM mainly by increasing the release of Ca, Si, and Fe, and to a lesser extent by stimulating root growth and microbial-derived carbon inputs. Our study indicates that ERW with wollastonite can promote SOC sequestration in stable MOAM in surface soils through both the soil mineral carbon pump and microbial carbon pump. These effects may have been larger than the inorganic CDR during our experiment. We argue it is essential to account for the responses of SOC in the assessments of CDR by ERW. Our study provides field-experimental evidence that enhanced rock weathering with wollastonite powder can promote the sequestration of both soil organic carbon (SOC) and soil inorganic carbon in the forest ecosystem. Enhanced rock weathering greatly improves the SOC in stable mineral-associated organic matter in surface soils and therefore the stability of SOC through both the soil mineral carbon pump and microbial carbon pump. We highlight that it is essential to account for the responses of SOC in the assessments of carbon dioxide removal by enhanced rock weathering.image
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The limits of forest carbon sequestration
    Green, Julia K.
    Keenan, Trevor F.
    SCIENCE, 2022, 376 (6594) : 692 - 693
  • [32] Forest soils and carbon sequestration
    Lal, R
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2005, 220 (1-3) : 242 - 258
  • [33] Carbon sequestration capacity of the forest
    Xu D.
    Liu H.
    Liu, Hao (liuhao456123@sina.com), 2018, Italian Association of Chemical Engineering - AIDIC (71): : 1123 - 1128
  • [34] Soil carbon management and enhanced rock weathering: The separate fates of organic and inorganic carbon
    Manning, David A. C.
    de Azevedo, Antonio Carlos
    Zani, Caio F.
    Barneze, Arlete S.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 2024, 75 (04)
  • [35] Earthworms in an enhanced weathering mesocosm experiment: Effects on soil carbon sequestration, base cation exchange and soil CO2 efflux
    Vienne, Arthur
    Frings, Patrick
    Poblador, Silvia
    Steinwidder, Laura
    Rijnders, Jet
    Schoelynck, Jonas
    Vinduskova, Olga
    Vicca, Sara
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2024, 199
  • [36] Manganese limitations and the enhanced soil carbon sequestration of temperate rainforests
    J. M. Kranabetter
    T. J. Philpott
    D. E. Dunn
    Biogeochemistry, 2021, 156 : 195 - 209
  • [37] Manganese limitations and the enhanced soil carbon sequestration of temperate rainforests
    Kranabetter, J. M.
    Philpott, T. J.
    Dunn, D. E.
    BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, 2021, 156 (02) : 195 - 209
  • [38] Plant and mycorrhizal driven silicate weathering: Quantifying carbon flux and mineral weathering processes at the laboratory mesocosm scale
    Andrews, M. Y.
    Leake, J. R.
    Palmer, B. G.
    Banwart, S. A.
    Beerling, D. J.
    APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY, 2011, 26 : S314 - S316
  • [39] Climate Sensitivities of Carbon Turnover Times in Soil and Vegetation: Understanding Their Effects on Forest Carbon Sequestration
    Ge, Rong
    He, Honglin
    Zhang, Li
    Ren, Xiaoli
    Williams, Mathew
    Yu, Guirui
    Smallman, T. Luke
    Zhou, Tao
    Li, Pan
    Xie, Zongqiang
    Wang, Silong
    Wang, Huimin
    Zhou, Guoyi
    Zhang, Qibin
    Wang, Anzhi
    Fan, Zexin
    Zhang, Yiping
    Shen, Weijun
    Yin, Huajun
    Lin, Luxiang
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2022, 127 (03)
  • [40] The role of hydrology on enhanced weathering for carbon sequestration I. Modeling rock-dissolution reactions coupled to plant, soil moisture, and carbon dynamics
    Cipolla, Giuseppe
    Calabrese, Salvatore
    Noto, Leonardo Valerio
    Porporato, Amilcare
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2021, 154