Soil Organic Carbon Stocks in Mixed-Deciduous and Coniferous Forests in Austria

被引:15
|
作者
Jandl, Robert [1 ]
Ledermann, Thomas [2 ]
Kindermann, Georg [2 ]
Weiss, Peter [3 ]
机构
[1] Austrian Forest Res Ctr BFW, Inst Forest Ecol, Vienna, Austria
[2] Austrian Forest Res Ctr BFW, Inst Silviculture, Vienna, Austria
[3] Environm Agcy Austria, Vienna, Austria
关键词
Austrian forest soil survey; coniferous forest; mixed-deciduous forest; soil organic carbon stock; climate change mitigation; climate change adaptation; SPRUCE PICEA-ABIES; NORWAY SPRUCE; STANDS; DECOMPOSITION; POOLS; RATES; TRANSFORMATION; SEQUESTRATION; MECHANISMS; ECOSYSTEM;
D O I
10.3389/ffgc.2021.688851
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Question: We compared the soil organic carbon stock of the forests of an entire country. The objective of our research was establishing the differences between coniferous or deciduous forests with respect to soil carbon stocks. The question is relevant because coniferous forests are increasingly damaged by abiotic and biotic disturbances that are related to climate change. Deciduous forests are considered to be less vulnerable. Their soils are expected to be more persistent and reliable sinks for carbon dioxide. Methods: Soil data are available from the Austrian Forest Soil Survey. Soils have been sampled on sites of the Austrian Forest Inventory. The data were stratified according to geology (calcareous vs. silicatic bedrock), orientation of the slopes, and forest type (coniferous vs. mixed-deciduous forest). These data were used to establish ground truth of soil organic carbon stocks. Further, we had simulation results of a coupled forest growth/soil carbon model. The scenarios built on the results of the Forest Inventory 2007/09 and reflect a business-as-usual forest management vs. a climate-change adaptation scenario where forest managers replace coniferous with deciduous forests if site conditions permit it. The simulations were performed with the forest growth simulator CaLDIS and the soil carbon model Yasso07. Results: Based on the Austrian Forest Soil Survey carbon stocks of coniferous forests were consistently higher than in mixed-deciduous forests. This result applies both for the organic litter layer and the mineral soil to a depth of 50 cm. The depth gradients of carbon were similar in both forest types. The simulation under a strong warming scenario showed an increase in the carbon stocks of soils when conifers are replaced by deciduous tree species. In the 150-year simulation the majority of forest sites will become suitable for deciduous forests. The build-up of a large soil organic carbon stock is driven by the stronger harvesting pressure on the remaining coniferous forests. Deciduous forests were in lesser demand and developed under a light forest intervention regime. However, toward the end of the century, when the temperature level is far above present levels, the soil organic carbon stocks declined.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Altitudinal variation of soil organic carbon stocks in temperate forests of Kashmir Himalayas, India
    Dar, Javid Ahmad
    Somaiah, Sundarapandian
    ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT, 2015, 187 (02)
  • [12] Organic-carbon and nitrogen stocks and organic-carbon fractions in soil under mixed pine and oak forest stands of different ages in NE Germany
    Matos, Eduardo S.
    Freese, Dirk
    Slazak, Anna
    Bachmann, Ute
    Veste, Maik
    Huettl, Reinhard F.
    JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION AND SOIL SCIENCE, 2010, 173 (05) : 654 - 661
  • [13] Changes in Biomass Carbon and Soil Organic Carbon Stocks following the Conversion from a Secondary Coniferous Forest to a Pine Plantation
    Li, Shuaifeng
    Su, Jianrong
    Liu, Wande
    Lang, Xuedong
    Huang, Xiaobo
    Jia, Chengxinzhuo
    Zhang, Zhijun
    Tong, Qing
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (09):
  • [14] Effects of seasonal changes on the carbon dynamics in mixed coniferous forests
    Gao, Tong
    Song, Xinyu
    Ren, Yunze
    Liu, Hui
    Meng, Yuan
    Dong, Xibin
    PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (04):
  • [15] Effects of topographic factors and aboveground vegetation carbon stocks on soil organic carbon in Moso bamboo forests
    Fang, Huiyun
    Ji, Biyong
    Deng, Xu
    Ying, Jiayang
    Zhou, Guomo
    Shi, Yongjun
    Xu, Lin
    Tao, Jixing
    Zhou, Yufeng
    Li, Chong
    Zheng, Hao
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2018, 433 (1-2) : 363 - 376
  • [16] Soil carbon stocks and accumulation in young mangrove forests
    Lunstrum, Abby
    Chen, Luzhen
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2014, 75 : 223 - 232
  • [17] Soil organic carbon stocks in fluvial and isolated tropical wetlands from Colombia
    Perez-Rojas, Jonathan
    Moreno, Flavio
    Cesar Quevedo, Julio
    Villa, Jorge
    CATENA, 2019, 179 : 139 - 148
  • [18] Soil aggregation accounts for the mineral soil organic carbon and nitrogen accrual in broadleaved forests as compared to that of coniferous forests in Northeast China: Cross-sites and multiple species comparisons
    Wei, Chenhui
    Wang, Qiong
    Ren, Manli
    Pei, Zhongxue
    Lu, Jiali
    Wang, Huimei
    Wang, Wenjie
    LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 32 (01) : 296 - 309
  • [19] Soil and tree phyllosphere microbial communities differ between coniferous and broadleaf deciduous boreal forests
    Rodriguez-Rodriguez, Juanita C.
    Fenton, Nicole J.
    Bergeron, Yves
    Kembel, Steven W.
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2023, 488 (1-2) : 233 - 253
  • [20] Soil respiration in temperate forests is increased by a shift from coniferous to deciduous trees but not by an increase in temperature
    Jilkova, Veronika
    APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2020, 154