4.7 Article

Land use and management effects on soil carbon in US Lake States, with emphasis on forestry, fire, and reforestation

Journal

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2356

Keywords

best management practices; carbon management; forest harvest; meta-analysis

Funding

  1. USDA-Forest Service, Northern Research Station [17-CR-11242306-028, 19-CR-11242306-096]
  2. Frank E. and Seba B. Payne Foundation
  3. University of Michigan Biological Station

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The analysis shows that natural factors have a greater control over soil organic carbon stocks than land use and management; harvesting leads to significant decreases in topsoil SOC stocks, but there are exceptions to this trend; land use changes only have limited impacts on SOC storage, primarily reforestation and forest conversion to cultivation.
There is growing need to quantify and communicate how land use and management activities influence soil organic carbon (SOC) at scales relevant to, and in the tangible control of landowners and forest managers. The continued proliferation of publications and growth of data sets, data synthesis and meta-analysis approaches allows the application of powerful tools to such questions at ever finer scales. In this analysis, we combined a literature review and effect-size meta-analysis with two large, independent, observational databases to assess how land use and management impact SOC stocks, primarily with regards to forest land uses. We performed this work for the (Great Lakes) U.S. Lake States, which comprise 6% of the land area, but 7% of the forest and 9% of the forest SOC in the United States, as the second in a series of ecoregional SOC assessments. Most importantly, our analysis indicates that natural factors, such as soil texture and parent material, exert more control over SOC stocks than land use or management. With that for context, our analysis also indicates which natural factors most influence management impacts on SOC storage. We report an overall trend of significantly diminished topsoil SOC stocks with harvesting, consistent across all three data sets, while also demonstrating how certain sites and soils diverge from this pattern, including some that show opposite trends. Impacts of fire grossly mirror those of harvesting, with declines near the top of the profile, but potential gains at depth and no net change when considering the whole profile. Land use changes showing significant SOC impacts are limited to reforestation on barren mining substrates (large and variable gains) and conversion of native forest to cultivation (losses). We describe patterns within the observational data that reveal the physical basis for preferential land use, e.g., cultivation of soils with the most favorable physical properties, and forest plantation establishment on the most marginal soils, and use these patterns to identify management opportunities and considerations. We also qualify our results with ratings of confidence, based on their degree of support across approaches, and offer concise, defensible tactics for adapting management operations to site-specific criteria and SOC vulnerability.

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