Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/71592
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Type: Journal article
Title: Simulation of salinity effects on past, present, and future soil organic carbon stocks
Author: Setia, R.
Smith, P.
Marschner, P.
Gottschalk, P.
Baldock, J.
Verma, V.
Setia, D.
Smith, J.
Citation: Environmental Science and Technology (Washington), 2012; 46(3):1624-1631
Publisher: Amer Chemical Soc
Issue Date: 2012
ISSN: 0013-936X
1520-5851
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Raj Setia, Pete Smith, Petra Marschner, Pia Gottschalk, Jeff Baldock, Vipan Verma, Deepika Setia and Jo Smith
Abstract: Soil organic carbon (SOC) models are used to predict changes in SOC stocks and carbon dioxide (CO(2)) emissions from soils, and have been successfully validated for non-saline soils. However, SOC models have not been developed to simulate SOC turnover in saline soils. Due to the large extent of salt-affected areas in the world, it is important to correctly predict SOC dynamics in salt-affected soils. To close this knowledge gap, we modified the Rothamsted Carbon Model (RothC) to simulate SOC turnover in salt-affected soils, using data from non-salt-affected and salt-affected soils in two agricultural regions in India (120 soils) and in Australia (160 soils). Recently we developed a decomposition rate modifier based on an incubation study of a subset of these soils. In the present study, we introduce a new method to estimate the past losses of SOC due to salinity and show how salinity affects future SOC stocks on a regional scale. Because salinity decreases decomposition rates, simulations using the decomposition rate modifier for salinity suggest an accumulation of SOC. However, if the plant inputs are also adjusted to reflect reduced plant growth under saline conditions, the simulations show a significant loss of soil carbon in the past due to salinization, with a higher average loss of SOC in Australian soils (55 t C ha(-1)) than in Indian soils (31 t C ha(-1)). There was a significant negative correlation (p < 0.05) between SOC loss and osmotic potential. Simulations of future SOC stocks with the decomposition rate modifier and the plant input modifier indicate a greater decrease in SOC in saline than in non-saline soils under future climate. The simulations of past losses of SOC due to salinity were repeated using either measured charcoal-C or the inert organic matter predicted by the Falloon et al. equation to determine how much deviation from the Falloon et al. equation affects the amount of plant inputs generated by the model for the soils used in this study. Both sets of results suggest that saline soils have lost carbon and will continue to lose carbon under future climate. This demonstrates the importance of both reduced decomposition and reduced plant input in simulations of future changes in SOC stocks in saline soils.
Keywords: Plants
Carbon
Humic Substances
Soil
Climate
Models, Chemical
Computer Simulation
India
South Australia
Salinity
Rights: Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
DOI: 10.1021/es2027345
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es2027345
Appears in Collections:Agriculture, Food and Wine publications
Aurora harvest
Environment Institute publications

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