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Soil organic carbon stocks and flows in New Zealand: System development, measurement and modelling
被引:48
|作者:
Tate, KR
Wilde, RH
Giltrap, DJ
Baisden, WT
Saggar, S
Trustrum, NA
Scott, NA
Barton, JR
机构:
[1] Landcare Res, Palmerston North, New Zealand
[2] Inst Geol & Nucl Sci, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
[3] Queens Univ, Dept Geog, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
[4] Climate Change Off, Minist Environm, Wellington, New Zealand
关键词:
soil organic carbon;
land-use change;
stocks;
flows;
measurement;
modelling;
IPCC;
D O I:
10.4141/S04-082
中图分类号:
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号:
0903 ;
090301 ;
摘要:
An IPCC-based Carbon Monitoring System (CMS) was developed to monitor soil organic C stocks and flows to assist New Zealand to achieve its CO2 emissions reduction target under the Kyoto Protocol. Geo-referenced soil C data from 1158 sites (0.3 in depth) were used to assign steady-state soil C stocks to various combinations of soil class, climate, and land use. Overall, CMS soil C stock estimates are consistent with detailed, stratified soil C measurements at specific sites and over larger regions. Soil C changes accompanying land-use changes were quantified using a national set of land-use effects (LUEs). These were derived using a General Linear Model to include the effects of numeric predictors (e.g., slope angle). Major uncertainties arise from estimates of changes in the areas involved, the assumption that soil C is at steady state for all land-cover types, and lack of soil C data for some LUEs. Total national soil organic C stocks estimated using the LUEs for 0-0.1, 0.1-0.3, and 0.3-1 in depths were 1300 +/- 20, 1590 +/- 30, and 1750 +/- 70 Tg, respectively. Most soil C is stored in grazing lands (1480 +/- 60 Tg to 0.3 in depth), which appear to be at or near steady state; their conversion to exotic forests and shrubland contributed most to the predicted national soil C loss of 0.6 +/- 0.2 Tg C yr(-1) during 1990-2000. Predicted and measured soil C changes for the grazing-forestry conversion agreed closely. Other uncertainties in our current soil CMS include: spatially integrated annual changes in soil C for the major land-use changes, lack of soil C change estimates below 0.3 in, C losses from erosion, the contribution of agricultural management of organic soils, and a possible interaction between land use and our soil-climate classification. Our approach could be adapted for use by other countries with land-use-change issues that differ from those in the IPCC default methodology.
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页码:481 / 489
页数:9
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