Active Restoration of Carbon Poor Degraded Grassland Accelerated Subsoil Carbon Accumulation and Turnover

Grassland degradation and its impact on soil carbon cycle is of worldwide concern, but optimal restoration strategies remain uncertain. We determined temperature sensitivity of organic cabon mineralization (CO2‐Q10) and the mechanisms underlying changes in soil organic carbon (SOC) content across non‐restored and restored grasslands on the Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau. Topsoil and subsoil with three SOC contents from non‐restored and passively or actively restored grasslands were incubated for 28 days at 5, 15, and 25°C. We determined the Q10 of SOC mineralization, and the importance of vegetation, soil physico‐chemical properties and microbial communities regulating CO2‐Q10. In C‐poor soil, SOC mineralization rate was slowest with active restoration, but SOC storage increased in both topsoil and subsoil. Increased soil pH and C availability raised CO2‐Q10 in the actively restored grassland. In subsoil of C‐middle soil, SOC storage in passively and actively restored grasslands were 81% and 25% greater, respectively, than in non‐restored grassland. In the topsoil of C‐rich soil, passively restored grassland had less SOC storage (7.5 kg·m−2) than non‐restored grassland (10 kg·m−2), because the greater aboveground biomass increased SOC decomposition caused by the priming effects driven by organic inputs from litter. The CO2‐Q10 in C‐rich topsoil in passively restored grasslands (1.1) was less than in non‐restored grassland (1.3). These findings emphasize that effective restoration management should consider initial organic C content of the degraded grassland to develop the best ecological restoration approaches to maximize C storage and limit CO2 emission into the atmosphere.

Authors
Wu Jingjing1 , Gong Jinchao1 , Sun Feida1 , Zhou Shijie1 , Kausar Tahmina1 , Li Tong2 , Cui Lizhen3 , Xu Zhihong4 , Degen A.Allan5 , Kuzyakov Yakov 6, 7 , Bai Yanfu1
Number of issue
9
Language
English
Status
Published
Volume
13
Year
2025
Organizations
  • 1 College of Grassland Science &amp
  • 2 School of Agriculture and Food Sustainability The University of Queensland St Lucia QLD Australia
  • 3 College of Life Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
  • 4 Centre for Planetary Health and Food Security School of Environment and Science Griffith University, Nathan Brisbane QLD Australia
  • 5 Desert Animal Adaptations and Husbandry Wyler Department of Dryland Agriculture Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research Ben‐Gurion University of Negev Beer Sheva Israel
  • 6 Department of Agricultural Soil Science Department of Soil Science of Temperate Ecosystems University of Gottingen Gottingen Germany
  • 7 Peoples Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) Moscow Russia
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