4.7 Article

Seasonal flooding wetland expansion would strongly affect soil and sediment organic carbon storage and carbon-nutrient stoichiometry

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 828, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154427

Keywords

Water level fluctuation; Soil organic carbon; Stoichiometric relationship; Soil depth; Middle-lower Yangtze Floodplain; Poyang Lake

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32160308]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangxi Province [20171BAB214008]

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By studying Poyang Lake and Shengjin Lake in the middle-lower Yangtze River floodplain in China, it was found that seasonal flooding has significant effects on SOC storage and carbon-nutrient stoichiometry. SOC storage in wetlands subjected to seasonal flooding is equivalent to that in near-natural NF and higher than that in disturbed NF. The carbon-nutrient stoichiometric relationships in SF and PF are similar and more coupled than those in near-natural NF.
In the past few decades, many non-flooding uplands (NF) and permanent flooding waters (PF) have been turned into seasonal flooding wetlands (SF) at the global scale. This trend could severely threaten global climate system by chang-ing carbon cycling in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. However, the effects of SF expansion on soil and sediment or-ganic carbon (SOC) storage and carbon-nutrient stoichiometry are far from clearly understood. Therefore, we explored SOC storage and carbon-nutrient stoichiometry among adjacent NF, SF and PF using 817 samples at 0-100 cm depth increment at Poyang Lake and Shengjin Lake in the middle-lower Yangtze River floodplain, China. The SFs of the two lakes were both Carex lakeshore wetlands. The NF of Shengjin Lake was a near-natural forest, while the NF of Poyang Lake was a disturbed grassland. The results showed that SOC storage at SFs of Poyang Lake and Shengjin Lake was 75.61 and 98.01 Mg C/ha at 0-100 cm depth increment. The difference in SOC storage among nearby NF, SF and PF depended on depth and disturbance. SOC storage at SF was equivalent to that at near-natural NF, but was much higher than that at disturbed NF. SOC storage at SF was 12.62%-24.50% higher than that at PF at 0-30 cm depth increment, but was 15.16%-25.87% lower than that at PF at 0-100 cm depth increment. Edaphic carbon and nutrients followed allometric relationships at most sites and C increased faster than N and P along the depth gradients. Carbon nutrient stoichiometric relationships at SF and PF were similar, and were more coupled than those at near-natural NF. This research illustrates the strong effects of seasonal flooding on SOC sequestration in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, and expands our understanding of carbon cycling in these two ecosystems.

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