Literature DB >> 23504937

Soil carbon stocks and carbon sequestration rates in seminatural grassland in Aso region, Kumamoto, Southern Japan.

Yo Toma1, John Clifton-Brown, Shinji Sugiyama, Makoto Nakaboh, Ryusuke Hatano, Fabián G Fernández, J Ryan Stewart, Aya Nishiwaki, Toshihiko Yamada.   

Abstract

Global soil carbon (C) stocks account for approximately three times that found in the atmosphere. In the Aso mountain region of Southern Japan, seminatural grasslands have been maintained by annual harvests and/or burning for more than 1000 years. Quantification of soil C stocks and C sequestration rates in Aso mountain ecosystem is needed to make well-informed, land-use decisions to maximize C sinks while minimizing C emissions. Soil cores were collected from six sites within 200 km(2) (767-937 m asl.) from the surface down to the k-Ah layer established 7300 years ago by a volcanic eruption. The biological sources of the C stored in the Aso mountain ecosystem were investigated by combining C content at a number of sampling depths with age (using (14) C dating) and δ(13) C isotopic fractionation. Quantification of plant phytoliths at several depths was used to make basic reconstructions of past vegetation and was linked with C-sequestration rates. The mean total C stock of all six sites was 232 Mg C ha(-1) (28-417 Mg C ha(-1) ), which equates to a soil C sequestration rate of 32 kg C ha(-1)  yr(-1) over 7300 years. Mean soil C sequestration rates over 34, 50 and 100 years were estimated by an equation regressing soil C sequestration rate against soil C accumulation interval, which was modeled to be 618, 483 and 332 kg C ha(-1)  yr(-1) , respectively. Such data allows for a deeper understanding in how much C could be sequestered in Miscanthus grasslands at different time scales. In Aso, tribe Andropogoneae (especially Miscanthus and Schizoachyrium genera) and tribe Paniceae contributed between 64% and 100% of soil C based on δ(13) C abundance. We conclude that the seminatural, C4 -dominated grassland system serves as an important C sink, and worthy of future conservation.
© 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23504937     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12189

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  2 in total

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Authors:  Roy C Sidle; Takashi Gomi; Munemitsu Akasaka; Kenta Koyanagi
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2017-12-29       Impact factor: 5.129

2.  Collecting wild Miscanthus germplasm in Asia for crop improvement and conservation in Europe whilst adhering to the guidelines of the United Nations' Convention on Biological Diversity.

Authors:  Lin S Huang; Richard Flavell; Iain S Donnison; Yu-Chung Chiang; Astley Hastings; Charlotte Hayes; Chris Heidt; Hao Hong; Tsai-Wen Hsu; Mervyn Humphreys; Julian Jackson; John Norris; Kai-Uwe Schwarz; Michael Squance; Timothy Swaller; Ian David Thomas; Wilfriede Van Assche; Qingguo Xi; Toshihiko Yamada; Sue Youell; John Clifton-Brown
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2019-10-29       Impact factor: 4.357

  2 in total

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