Response of Deep Soil Carbon Pools to Forest Management in a Highly Productive Andisol
2017
Dietzen, Christiana A. | Marques, Eduardo R.G. | James, Jason N. | Bernardi, Rodolpho H.A. | Holub, Scott M. | Harrison, Robert B.
Core Ideas Deep soils are rarely included in studies of management effects on soil carbon. The majority of soil carbon at this site was stored in subsurface (>30 cm) horizons. Forest management did not significantly affect total carbon pools to a depth of 3 m. Control of competing vegetation increased carbon storage deep in the soil profile. Soil contains more C than the atmosphere and plant biomass combined. Consequently, it is the most important long‐term sink for C within terrestrial ecosystems. An understanding of the potential to induce C sequestration in soils through management is crucial in light of increasing anthropogenic CO₂ emissions. Nevertheless, soil has historically been under‐represented in C cycling research, especially regarding subsurface (>30 cm) layers and processes. Research on the effects of forest management practices on deep soil C has been lacking. To test the effects of biomass removal and vegetation control treatments on deep soil C, soils were sampled to a depth of 3 m at the Fall River Long‐term Soil Productivity Site in western Washington State. Treatments were installed 15 yr previously in a complete randomized block design. No difference was found in total soil C among treatments, but there was significantly less (a = 0.10) C stored at the deepest interval measured (250–300 cm) in the plots with vegetation control (8.6 Mg C ha‐¹) than in those without (16.3 Mg C ha‐¹). These results suggest the stability of soil C pools at Fall River and indicate that more intensive management practices may not deplete C pools at this site, but imply that these deep soil pools may be more sensitive to change than shallow pools. Here, 58.2% of the soil C pool is located below 30 cm, which demonstrates that shallow sampling significantly underestimates soil C pools and highlights the importance of understanding processes that control deep soil C.
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