Soil organic carbon stock change following perennialization: a meta-analysis

被引:0
作者
Imran Ahammad Siddique
Diego Grados
Ji Chen
Poul Erik Lærke
Uffe Jørgensen
机构
[1] Aarhus University,Department of Agroecology
[2] Bangladesh Agricultural University,Department of Soil Science
[3] Aarhus University,iClimate Interdisciplinary Centre for Climate Change
[4] Aarhus University Centre for Circular Bioeconomy,undefined
[5] Aarhus University,undefined
来源
Agronomy for Sustainable Development | 2023年 / 43卷
关键词
Perennial crop; Annual crop; Monoculture; Crop age; Carbon sequestration; Climate change;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Perennial crops replacing annual crops are drawing global attention because they harbor potential for sustainable biomass production and climate change mitigation through soil carbon sequestration. At present, it remains unclear how long perennial crops can sequester carbon in the soil and how soil carbon stock dynamics are influenced by climate, soil, and plant properties across the globe. This study presents a meta-analysis synthesizing 51 publications (351 observations at 77 sites) distributed over different pedo-climatic conditions to scrutinize the effect of perennialization on organic carbon accumulation in soil compared with two annual benchmark systems (i.e., monoculture and crop rotation). Results showed that perennial crops significantly increased soil organic carbon stock by 16.6% and 23.1% at 0–30 cm depth compared with monoculture and crop rotation, respectively. Shortly after establishment (< 5 years), perennial crops revealed a negative impact on soil organic carbon stock; however, long duration (> 10 years) of perennialization had a significant positive effect on soil organic carbon stock by 30% and 36.4% at 0–30 cm depth compared with monoculture and crop rotation, respectively. Compared with both annual systems, perennial crops significantly increased soil organic carbon stock regardless of their functional photosynthetic types (C3, C4, or C3-C4 intermediates) and vegetation type (woody or herbaceous). Among other factors, pH had a significant impact on soil organic carbon; however, the effect of soil textures showed no significant impact, possibly due to a lack of observations from each textural class and mixed pedoclimatic effects. Results also showed that time effect of perennialization revealed a sigmoidal increase of soil organic carbon stock until about 20 years; thereafter, the soil carbon stocks advanced towards a steady-state level. In conclusion, perennial crops increased soil organic carbon stock compared with annual systems; however, the time since conversion from annual to perennial system decisively impacted soil organic carbon stock changes.
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