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Carbon sequestration in an intensively cultivated sandy loam soil in the North China Plain as affected by compost and inorganic fertilizer application

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Publication date: October 2014
Source:Geoderma, Volumes 230–231
Author(s): Jianling Fan , Weixin Ding , Jian Xiang , Shenwu Qin , Jiabao Zhang , Noura Ziadi
Understanding the balance between soil organic carbon (SOC) accumulation and depletion under different fertilization regimes is important for improving soil quality and crop productivity and for mitigating climate change. A long-term field experiment established in 1989 was used to monitor the influence of organic and inorganic fertilizers on the SOC stock in a soil depth of 0–60cm under an intensive wheat–maize cropping system in the North China Plain. The study involved seven treatments with four replicates: CM, compost; HCM, half compost nitrogen (N) plus half fertilizer N; NPK, fertilizer N, phosphorus (P), and potassium (K); NP, fertilizer N and P; NK, fertilizer N and K; PK, fertilizer P and K; and CK, control without fertilization. Soil samples were collected and analyzed for SOC content in the 0–20cm layer each year and in the 20–40cm and 40–60cm layers every five years. The SOC stock in the 0–60cm depth displayed a net decrease over 20years under treatments without fertilizer P or N, and in contrast, increased by proportions ranging from 3.7% to 31.1% under the addition of compost and fertilizer N and P. The stabilization rate of exogenous organic carbon (C) into SOC was only 1.5% in NPK-treated soil but amounted to 8.7% to 14.1% in compost-amended soils (CM and HCM). The total quantities of sequestered SOC were linearly related (P <0.01) to cumulative C inputs to the soil, and a critical input amount of 2.04MgCha1 yr1 was found to be required to maintain the SOC stock level (zero change due to cropping). However, the organic C sequestration rate in the 0–60cm depth decreased from 0.41 to 0.29MgCha1 yr1 for HCM and from 0.90 to 0.29MgCha1 yr1 for CM from the period of 1989–1994 to the period of 2004–2009, indicating that the SOC stock was getting to saturation after the long-term application of compost. The estimated SOC saturation level in the 0–60cm depth for CM was 61.31MgCha1, which was 1.52 and 1.14 times the levels for NPK and HCM, respectively. These results show that SOC sequestration in the North China Plain may mainly depend on the application of organic fertilizer. Furthermore, the SOC sequestration potential in the 0–20cm layer accounted for 40.3% to 44.6% of the total amount in the 0–60cm depth for NPK, HCM, and CM, indicating that the SOC sequestration potential would be underestimated using topsoil only and that improving the depth distribution may be a practical way to achieve C sequestration.


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