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Variation Characteristics of Soil Organic Carbon Storage and Fractions with Stand Age in North Subtropical Quercus acutissima Carruth. Forest in China.

Authors :
Deng, Wenbin
Wang, Xia
Hu, Haibo
Zhu, Mengdie
Chen, Jianyu
Zhang, Shuai
Cheng, Can
Zhu, Ziyi
Wu, Chaoming
Zhu, Li
Source :
Forests (19994907); Oct2022, Vol. 13 Issue 10, p1649-N.PAG, 14p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Soil labile organic carbon sensitively reflects subtle changes in the soil carbon pool and is an important aspect of forest soil carbon pool research. However, little is known regarding soil labile organic carbon storage and its dynamic changes during the development of Quercus acutissima Carruth. forests. Consequently, we investigated the dynamic changes in soil organic carbon and its labile organic carbon fraction stocks at soil depths of 0–10 cm, 10–20 cm, and 20–40 cm along a 17-year-old, 26-year-old, and 65-year-old chronosequence in Quercus acutissima forests. We found that stand age significantly impacted particulate organic carbon (POC), light fraction organic carbon (LFOC), and soil organic carbon (SOC). The POC, LFOC, and SOC contents at different soil depths exhibited an increasing trend with stand age, which could be described by simple linear regression. However, there was no noteworthy difference in the soil water-soluble organic carbon (WSOC) content between different stand ages. Moreover, the 17-year-old, stand had higher POC, LFOC, and WSOC to SOC ratios. Soil nutrients significantly affected organic carbon and fractions, which revealed that POC, LFOC, WSOC, and SOC were remarkably positively correlated with alkaline hydrolysis nitrogen (AN) and available phosphorus (AP) (p < 0.05). Furthermore, WSOC, POC, LFOC, and SOC were significantly positively correlated with available potassium (AK) (p < 0.05). POC, LFOC, and SOC storage in the 0–40 cm soil layer increased with stand development, while WSOC storage decreased at 65a. In addition, LFOC stocks accounted for the highest proportion of organic carbon stocks. Our results indicated that the development of Quercus acutissima forests was a process of carbon sink; however, the soil organic carbon activity was high, and the soil structure was unstable during the early development stage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994907
Volume :
13
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Forests (19994907)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159914231
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/f13101649