A review of soil carbon change in New Zealand's grazed grasslands

Soil organic matter is a potential sink of atmospheric carbon (C) and critical for maintaining soil quality. We reviewed New Zealand studies of soil C changes after conversion from woody vegetation to pasture, and under long-term pasture. Soil C increased by about 13.7 t C ha −1 to a new steady stat...

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Veröffentlicht in:New Zealand journal of agricultural research 2017-06, Vol.60 (2), p.93-118
Hauptverfasser: Schipper, Louis A., Mudge, Paul L., Kirschbaum, Miko U. F., Hedley, Carolyn B., Golubiewski, Nancy E., Smaill, Simeon J., Kelliher, Francis M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Soil organic matter is a potential sink of atmospheric carbon (C) and critical for maintaining soil quality. We reviewed New Zealand studies of soil C changes after conversion from woody vegetation to pasture, and under long-term pasture. Soil C increased by about 13.7 t C ha −1 to a new steady state when forests were initially converted to pasture. In the last 3-4 decades, resampling of soil profiles demonstrated that under long-term pasture on flat land, soil C had subsequently declined for allophanic, gley and organic soils by 0.54, 0.32 and 2.9 t C ha −1  y −1 , respectively, and soil C had not changed in the remainder of sampled soil orders. For the same time period, pasture soils on stable midslopes of hill country gained 0.6 t C ha −1  y −1 . Whether these changes are ongoing is not known, except for the organic soils where losses will continue so long as they are drained. Phosphorus fertiliser application did not change C stocks. Irrigation decreased carbon by 7 t C ha −1 . Carbon losses during pasture renewal ranged between 0.8 and 4.1 t C ha −1 . Some evidence suggests tussock grasslands can gain C when fertilised and not overgrazed. When combined to the national scale, different data sets suggest either no change or a gain of C, but with large uncertainties. We highlight key land-use practices and soil orders that require further information of soil C stock changes and advocate for a better understanding of underpinning reasons for changes in soil C.
ISSN:0028-8233
1175-8775
1175-8775
DOI:10.1080/00288233.2017.1284134