Abstract
The Australian cereal belt stretches as an arc from north-eastern Australia to
south-western Australia (24˚S–40˚S and
125˚E–147˚E), with mean annual temperatures from 14˚C
(temperate) to 26˚C (subtropical), and with annual rainfall ranging from
250 mm to 1500 mm. The predominant soil types of the cereal belt include
Chromosols, Kandosols, Sodosols, and Vertosols, with significant areas of
Ferrosols, Kurosols, Podosols, and Dermosols, covering approximately 20 Mha of
arable cropping and 21 Mha of ley pastures.
Cultivation and cropping has led to a substantial loss of soil organic matter
(SOM) from the Australian cereal belt; the long-term SOM loss often exceeds
60% from the top 0–0.1 m depth after 50 years of cereal cropping.
Loss of labile components of SOM such as sand-size or particulate SOM,
microbial biomass, and mineralisable nitrogen has been even higher, thus
resulting in greater loss in soil productivity than that assessed from the
loss of total SOM alone. Since SOM is heterogeneous in nature, the
significance and functions of its various components are ambiguous. It is
essential that the relationship between levels of total SOM or its identif
iable components and the most affected soil properties be established and then
quantif ied before the concentrations or amounts of SOM and/or its
components can be used as a performance indicator. There is also a need for
experimentally verifiable soil organic C pools in modelling the dynamics and
management of SOM. Furthermore, the interaction of environmental pollutants
added to soil, soil microbial biodiversity, and SOM is poorly understood and
therefore requires further study. Biophysically appropriate and cost-effective
management practices for cereal cropping lands are required for restoring and
maintaining organic matter for sustainable agriculture and restoration of
degraded lands. The additional benefit of SOM restoration will be an increase
in the long-term greenhouse C sink, which has the potentialto reduce
greenhouse emissions by about 50 Mt CO2
equivalents/year over a 20-year period, although current improved
agricultural practices can only sequester an estimated 23% of the
potential soil C sink.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
175 articles.
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