4.4 Article

CQESTR simulation of management practice effects on long-term soil organic carbon

Journal

SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL
Volume 72, Issue 5, Pages 1486-1492

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.2136/sssaj2007.0154

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service

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Management of soil organic matter (SOM) is important for soil productivity and responsible utilization of crop residues for additional uses. CQESTR, pronounced sequester, a contraction of C sequestration (meaning C storage), is a C balance model that relates organic residue additions, crop management, and soil tillage to SOM accretion or loss. Our objective was to simulate SOM changes in agricultural Soils under a range of climate and management systems using the CQESTR model. Four long-term experiments (Champaign, IL, > 100 yr; Columbia, MO, > 100 yr; Lincoln, NE, 20 yr; Sidney, NE, 20 yr) in die United States under various crop rotations, tillage practices, organic amendments, and crop residue removal treatments were selected for their documented history of the long-term effects of management practice on SOM dynamics. CQESTR successfully simulated a Substantial decline in SOM with 50 yr of crop residue removal under various rotations at Columbia and Champaign. The increase in SOM following addition of manure was simulated well; however, the model underestimated SOM for a fertilized treatment at Columbia. predicted and observed values from the four sites were significantly related (r(2) = 0.94, n = 113, P < 0.001), with slope not significantly different from 1. Given the high correlation of simulated and observed SOM changes, CQESTR. can be used as a reliable tool to predict SOM changes from management practices and offers the potential for estimating soil C storage required for C credits. It can also be an important tool to estimate the impacts of crop residue removal for bioenergy production on SOM level and soil production capacity.

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