Can C-budget of natural capital be restored through conservation agriculture in a tropical and subtropical environment?
2022
de Moraes Sá, João Carlos | Lal, R. | Briedis, Clever | de Oliveira Ferreira, Ademir | Tivet, Florent | Inagaki, Thiago Massao | Potma Gonçalves, Daniel Ruiz | Canalli, Lutécia Beatriz | Burkner dos Santos, Josiane | Romaniw, Jucimare
Conservation agriculture through no-till based on cropping systems with high biomass-C input, is a strategy to restoring the carbon (C) lost from natural capital by conversion to agricultural land. We hypothesize that cropping systems based on quantity, diversity and frequency of biomass-C input above soil C dynamic equilibrium level can recover the natural capital. The objectives of this study were to: i) assess the C-budget of land use change for two contrasting climatic environments, ii) estimate the C turnover time of the natural capital through no-till cropping systems, and iii) determine the C pathway since soil under native vegetation to no-till cropping systems. In a subtropical and tropical environment, three types of land use were used: a) undisturbed soil under native vegetation as the reference of pristine level; b) degraded soil through continuous tillage; and c) soil under continuous no-till cropping system with high biomass-C input. At the subtropical environment, the soil under continuous tillage caused loss of 25.4 Mg C ha⁻¹ in the 0–40 cm layer over 29 years. Of this, 17 Mg C ha⁻¹ was transferred into the 40–100 cm layers, resulting in the net negative C balance for 0–100 cm layer of 8.4 Mg C ha⁻¹ with an environmental cost of USD 1968 ha⁻¹. The 0.59 Mg C ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹ sequestration rate by no-till cropping system promote the C turnover time (soil and vegetation) of 77 years. For tropical environment, the soil C losses reached 27.0 Mg C ha⁻¹ in the 0–100 cm layer over 8 years, with the environmental cost of USD 6155 ha⁻¹, and the natural capital turnover time through C sequestration rate of 2.15 Mg C ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹ was 49 years. The results indicated that the particulate organic C and mineral associate organic C fractions are the indicators of losses and restoration of C and leading C pathway to recover natural capital through no-till cropping systems.
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