Changes of Soil C Stock under Establishment and Abandonment of Arable Lands in Permafrost Area—Central Yakutia

Central Yakutia is in one of the most northern agricultural centers of the world. In this territory a notable area of arable land was made by removing the boreal Taiga with the primary purpose of crop cultivation. Such a method of cultivation significantly changes soil total carbon (STC, soil organi...

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Main Authors: Alexey R. Desyatkin, Shinya Iwasaki, Roman V. Desyatkin, Ryusuke Hatano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-08-01
Series:Atmosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/9/8/308
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spelling doaj-5c5db7cb94764dab8a94cd60a1db69dc2020-11-25T00:20:21ZengMDPI AGAtmosphere2073-44332018-08-019830810.3390/atmos9080308atmos9080308Changes of Soil C Stock under Establishment and Abandonment of Arable Lands in Permafrost Area—Central YakutiaAlexey R. Desyatkin0Shinya Iwasaki1Roman V. Desyatkin2Ryusuke Hatano3Institute for Biological Problems of Cryolithozone, Siberian Branch, Russian Academy of Science, 677980 Yakutsk, RussiaGraduate School of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-8589, JapanInstitute for Biological Problems of Cryolithozone, Siberian Branch, Russian Academy of Science, 677980 Yakutsk, RussiaGraduate School of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-8589, JapanCentral Yakutia is in one of the most northern agricultural centers of the world. In this territory a notable area of arable land was made by removing the boreal Taiga with the primary purpose of crop cultivation. Such a method of cultivation significantly changes soil total carbon (STC, soil organic carbon + soil carbonate carbon) balance, because of the destroyed upper humus horizon. Soil organic carbon (SOC) of cultivated arable lands is almost a half of that in forest. In abandoned arable lands with grass vegetation, the recovery of SOC has increased to 30% in comparison with cultivated arable lands. On arable lands recovering with new growth of trees, the SOC is related to the abandonment period. Soil carbonates carbon (SCC) content was significantly lower than SOC and showed significant difference among abandoned and other types of arable lands. Objectives of this study are to identify how STC stocks change in response to conversion of the forests to agricultural land and to analyze the arable land system’s recovery process after abandonment. Furthermore, after transformation of forest to arable land, a significant decrease of STC was observed, primarily due to mechanical loss after plant residue removal. It was also identified that the restoration and self-recovery of STC in abandoned arable lands of Central Yakutia continuously and slightly increase. Grass vegetation regenerates STC for 20 years. While the difference of average STC of forests and cultivated arable lands reached 41%, a new growth of forest on some abandoned arable land follows the tendency of STC decrease due to a low productivity level and suppressing effect on grass vegetation.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/9/8/308Central Yakutiaarable landsoil organic carbonsoil carbonate carbonsoil carbon recovery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexey R. Desyatkin
Shinya Iwasaki
Roman V. Desyatkin
Ryusuke Hatano
spellingShingle Alexey R. Desyatkin
Shinya Iwasaki
Roman V. Desyatkin
Ryusuke Hatano
Changes of Soil C Stock under Establishment and Abandonment of Arable Lands in Permafrost Area—Central Yakutia
Atmosphere
Central Yakutia
arable land
soil organic carbon
soil carbonate carbon
soil carbon recovery
author_facet Alexey R. Desyatkin
Shinya Iwasaki
Roman V. Desyatkin
Ryusuke Hatano
author_sort Alexey R. Desyatkin
title Changes of Soil C Stock under Establishment and Abandonment of Arable Lands in Permafrost Area—Central Yakutia
title_short Changes of Soil C Stock under Establishment and Abandonment of Arable Lands in Permafrost Area—Central Yakutia
title_full Changes of Soil C Stock under Establishment and Abandonment of Arable Lands in Permafrost Area—Central Yakutia
title_fullStr Changes of Soil C Stock under Establishment and Abandonment of Arable Lands in Permafrost Area—Central Yakutia
title_full_unstemmed Changes of Soil C Stock under Establishment and Abandonment of Arable Lands in Permafrost Area—Central Yakutia
title_sort changes of soil c stock under establishment and abandonment of arable lands in permafrost area—central yakutia
publisher MDPI AG
series Atmosphere
issn 2073-4433
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Central Yakutia is in one of the most northern agricultural centers of the world. In this territory a notable area of arable land was made by removing the boreal Taiga with the primary purpose of crop cultivation. Such a method of cultivation significantly changes soil total carbon (STC, soil organic carbon + soil carbonate carbon) balance, because of the destroyed upper humus horizon. Soil organic carbon (SOC) of cultivated arable lands is almost a half of that in forest. In abandoned arable lands with grass vegetation, the recovery of SOC has increased to 30% in comparison with cultivated arable lands. On arable lands recovering with new growth of trees, the SOC is related to the abandonment period. Soil carbonates carbon (SCC) content was significantly lower than SOC and showed significant difference among abandoned and other types of arable lands. Objectives of this study are to identify how STC stocks change in response to conversion of the forests to agricultural land and to analyze the arable land system’s recovery process after abandonment. Furthermore, after transformation of forest to arable land, a significant decrease of STC was observed, primarily due to mechanical loss after plant residue removal. It was also identified that the restoration and self-recovery of STC in abandoned arable lands of Central Yakutia continuously and slightly increase. Grass vegetation regenerates STC for 20 years. While the difference of average STC of forests and cultivated arable lands reached 41%, a new growth of forest on some abandoned arable land follows the tendency of STC decrease due to a low productivity level and suppressing effect on grass vegetation.
topic Central Yakutia
arable land
soil organic carbon
soil carbonate carbon
soil carbon recovery
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/9/8/308
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