4.8 Article

Major and persistent shifts in below-ground carbon dynamics and soil respiration following logging in tropical forests

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 10, Pages 2225-2240

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15522

Keywords

autotrophic respiration; belowground carbon allocation; CO2 flux; harvest; heterotrophic respiration; SAFE Project; selective logging; soil organic matter

Funding

  1. Sime Darby Foundation
  2. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/K016377/1]
  3. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute [DEB-9107247, DEB-9629601]
  4. Henry M. Jackson Foundation
  5. Malaysian Palm Oil Board
  6. Centre for Tropical Forest Science
  7. University of Zurich
  8. HSBC Malaysia
  9. Monbusho [06041094, 08NP0901, 09NP0901]
  10. European Research Council [321131]
  11. NERC [NE/K016377/1, NE/P001092/1, NE/M017508/1, NE/K016369/1, NE/K016253/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The study found that soil respiration was significantly higher in logged forests compared to old-growth forests, mainly due to higher soil organic matter (SOM) respiration. In old-growth forests, annual SOM respiration was equal to the organic carbon inputs, indicating equilibrium, while in logged forests SOM respiration exceeded the inputs, leading to carbon loss from the soil.
Soil respiration is the largest carbon efflux from the terrestrial ecosystem to the atmosphere, and selective logging influences soil respiration via changes in abiotic (temperature, moisture) and biotic (biomass, productivity, quantity and quality of necromass inputs) drivers. Logged forests are a predominant feature of the tropical forest landscape, their area exceeding that of intact forest. We quantified both total and component (root, mycorrhiza, litter, and soil organic matter, SOM) soil respiration in logged (n = 5) and old-growth (n = 6) forest plots in Malaysian Borneo, a region which is a global hotspot for emission from forest degradation. We constructed a detailed below-ground carbon budget including organic carbon inputs into the system via litterfall and root turnover. Total soil respiration was significantly higher in logged forests than in old-growth forests (14.3 +/- 0.23 and 12.7 +/- 0.60 Mg C ha(-1) year(-1), respectively, p = 0.037). This was mainly due to the higher SOM respiration in logged forests (55 +/- 3.1% of the total respiration in logged forests vs. 50 +/- 3.0% in old-growth forests). In old-growth forests, annual SOM respiration was equal to the organic carbon inputs into the soil (difference between SOM respiration and inputs 0.18 Mg C ha(-1) year(-1), with 90% confidence intervals of -0.41 and 0.74 Mg C ha(-1) year(-1)), indicating that the system is in equilibrium, while in logged forests SOM respiration exceeded the inputs by 4.2 Mg C ha(-1) year(-1) (90% CI of 3.6 and 4.9 Mg C ha(-1) year(-1)), indicating that the soil is losing carbon. These results contribute towards understanding the impact of logging on below-ground carbon dynamics, which is one of the key uncertainties in estimating emissions from forest degradation. This study demonstrates how significant perturbation of the below-ground carbon balance, and consequent net soil carbon emissions, can persist for decades after a logging event in tropical forests.

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