AI Article Synopsis

  • Soil plays a key role in the global carbon cycle, and understanding both the quantity and longevity of carbon stored in soils is crucial, especially in less studied regions like sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Previous research has predominantly focused on temperate regions, leaving gaps in knowledge regarding soil carbon dynamics in diverse climates and mineral compositions, which this study aims to address.
  • The findings reveal that organic carbon in moderately weathered soils in seasonal zones persists longer than in highly weathered soils in humid areas, with arid regions showing similar persistence to seasonal zones, suggesting that soil classification based on climatic conditions can enhance predictions of soil behavior under climate change.

Article Abstract

Given the importance of soil for the global carbon cycle, it is essential to understand not only how much carbon soil stores but also how long this carbon persists. Previous studies have shown that the amount and age of soil carbon are strongly affected by the interaction of climate, vegetation, and mineralogy. However, these findings are primarily based on studies from temperate regions and from fine-scale studies, leaving large knowledge gaps for soils from understudied regions such as sub-Saharan Africa. In addition, there is a lack of data to validate modeled soil C dynamics at broad scales. Here, we present insights into organic carbon cycling, based on a new broad-scale radiocarbon and mineral dataset for sub-Saharan Africa. We found that in moderately weathered soils in seasonal climate zones with poorly crystalline and reactive clay minerals, organic carbon persists longer on average (topsoil: 201 ± 130 years; subsoil: 645 ± 385 years) than in highly weathered soils in humid regions (topsoil: 140 ± 46 years; subsoil: 454 ± 247 years) with less reactive minerals. Soils in arid climate zones (topsoil: 396 ± 339 years; subsoil: 963 ± 669 years) store organic carbon for periods more similar to those in seasonal climate zones, likely reflecting climatic constraints on weathering, carbon inputs and microbial decomposition. These insights into the timescales of organic carbon persistence in soils of sub-Saharan Africa suggest that a process-oriented grouping of soils based on pedo-climatic conditions may be useful to improve predictions of soil responses to climate change at broader scales.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11497269PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.17089DOI Listing

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