Soil organic carbon pools as influenced by 21 years of conservation agriculture management practices in Saskatchewan

被引:0
|
作者
Hangs, Ryan [1 ]
Schoenau, Jeff [1 ]
Dhillon, Gurbir [1 ]
St Luce, Mervin [2 ]
McConkey, Brian [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Soil Sci, Saskatoon, SK, Canada
[2] Agr & AgriFood Canada, Swift Current, SK, Canada
[3] Viresco Solut, Victoria, BC, Canada
关键词
light fraction; microbial biomass; respirable CO 2-C; spectroscopy (8 13 C and ATR-FTIR); water-extractable; GREENHOUSE-GAS CONTRIBUTIONS; MICROBIAL BIOMASS CARBON; LIGHT-FRACTION; CROP-ROTATION; NO-TILL; FT-IR; LITTER DECOMPOSITION; METABOLIC QUOTIENT; MATTER FRACTIONS; BROWN CHERNOZEM;
D O I
10.1139/cjss-2023-0102
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Soil organic carbon (SOC) content is a key metric of soil quality and limited work has been done to examine the effect of longterm conservation agriculture management practices (CAMP) on SOC pools within western Canadian soils. We assessed the nature and permanence of sequestered SOC within 90 diverse Saskatchewan surface (0-10 cm) agricultural soils before and after 21 years of CAMP. Comparisons were made of total SOC, labile and dynamic SOC fractions (light fraction, water-extractable, and microbial biomass), respirable CO 2 -C during a 6-week incubation, along with spectroscopic characterization using 13 C/ 12 C stable isotope ratio and ATR-FTIR. Among soil climatic zones, the SOC content increased in the semi-arid Brown and Dark Brown soils, ranging from 2.4 to 3.7 Mg C ha - 1 (111.4-187.7 kg C ha - 1 year - 1 ), but did not change in the subhumid Black, Dark Gray, and Gray soils. Overall, soils having the smallest initial SOC level were most responsive to CAMP and accumulated more SOC. According to the 8 13 C data, CAMP appeared to reduce annual crop moisture stress, especially within the Brown soil zone. Decreased light fraction and water-extractable SOC contents in Black, Dark Gray, and Gray soils could reflect more intense decomposition and greater surface stratification of crop residues. Brown soils experienced the largest increase in microbial biomass-C content. The CO 2 -C emissions from the Brown, Dark Brown, and Gray soils under CAMP suggest greater SOC stability in 2018 compared with 1996. The ATR-FTIR data pointed to enhanced SOC persistence, via more stabilized SOC forms and mineral-associated organic C fractions.
引用
收藏
页码:434 / 455
页数:22
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