4.7 Article

Management-induced changes in soil organic carbon on global croplands

Journal

BIOGEOSCIENCES
Volume 19, Issue 21, Pages 5125-5149

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/bg-19-5125-2022

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DFG [SPP 1689, ED78/3-2]
  2. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01LS2101G]
  3. European Union [776479, 821010]
  4. BMBF [01LS2105A, 01DJ8012, 01LP1903D, 031B0787B]
  5. Soils-R-GGREAT project [NE/P019455/1]
  6. CIRCASA (EU H2020) [774378]

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This study reveals that anthropogenic land cover change and agricultural management have led to a significant loss of soil organic carbon (SOC). However, accounting for historical management decisions can reduce emissions and enhance SOC, particularly through residue returning. These findings suggest the potential of biomass retention as a promising negative emissions technique.
Soil organic carbon (SOC), one of the largest terrestrial carbon (C) stocks on Earth, has been depleted by anthropogenic land cover change and agricultural management. However, the latter has so far not been well represented in global C stock assessments. While SOC models often simulate detailed biochemical processes that lead to the accumulation and decay of SOC, the management decisions driving these biophysical processes are still little investigated at the global scale. Here we develop a spatially explicit data set for agricultural management on cropland, considering crop production levels, residue returning rates, manure application, and the adoption of irrigation and tillage practices. We combine it with a reduced-complexity model based on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) tier 2 method to create a half-degree resolution data set of SOC stocks and SOC stock changes for the first 30 cm of mineral soils. We estimate that, due to arable farming, soils have lost around 34.6 GtC relative to a counterfactual hypothetical natural state in 1975. Within the period 1975-2010, this SOC debt continued to expand by 5 GtC (0.14 GtC yr(-1)) to around 39.6 GtC. However, accounting for historical management led to 2.1 GtC fewer (0.06 GtC yr(-1)) emissions than under the assumption of constant management. We also find that management decisions have influenced the historical SOC trajectory most strongly by residue returning, indicating that SOC enhancement by biomass retention may be a promising negative emissions technique. The reduced-complexity SOC model may allow us to simulate management-induced SOC enhancement - also within computationally demanding integrated (land use) assessment modeling.

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