4.4 Article

Overlooking soil erosion induces underestimation of the soil C loss in degraded land

Journal

QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 349, Issue -, Pages 287-290

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2014.05.034

Keywords

Soil erosion; Carbon loss; Land degradation; Greenhouse effect

Funding

  1. China National Key Basic Research Program [2011CB403203]
  2. Strategic Science and Technology Guide Project of CAS [XDA05050401]

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Prediction and making targeted measures to address global climate change requires precise estimate of local, regional, and global carbon budgets. Previously estimated global carbon budgets had significant uncertainty partly due to overlooking the soil carbon loss from soil erosion. However, as result of surface features being indistinguishable between eroded and non-eroded land, the lack of historical monitoring data, and confusion surrounding soil biochemical process, soil erosion was often overlooked by researchers. The overlooking of soil erosion may induce a great underestimate of soil carbon loss after land degradation or land use change. Through a case study in northeast China, we found that overlooking soil erosion underestimated 50% of soil carbon loss in degraded grassland. As a result, assessment of global carbon budget and climate trends in the past remained inaccurate. It is necessary to consider soil erosion as an important factor when calculating global carbon budget, and develop new approaches to monitor soil erosion process and track the intrinsic effects of soil erosion on soil carbon dynamics. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved.

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