Significant accrual of soil organic carbon through long‐term rice cultivation in paddy fields in China

Author:

Yang Xiaomin123,Song Zhaoliang4ORCID,Van Zwieten Lukas56,Guo Laodong7,Chen Ji89ORCID,Luo Zhongkui10ORCID,Wang Yidong11,Luo Yu10ORCID,Wang Zhengang12,Wang Weiqi13,Wang Jingxu14,Wang Yu15,Liu Cong‐Qiang4,Wang Hailong6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Karst Georesources and Environment (Guizhou University) Ministry of Education Guiyang China

2. College of Resources and Environmental Engineering Guizhou University Guiyang China

3. Guizhou Karst Environmental Ecosystems Observation and Research Station Ministry of Education Guiyang China

4. Tianjin Key Laboratory of Earth Critical Zone Science and Sustainable Development in Bohai Rim, Institute of Surface‐Earth System Science, School of Earth System Science Tianjin University Tianjin China

5. NSW Department of Primary Industries Wollongbar New South Wales Australia

6. School of Environment and Chemical Engineering Foshan University Foshan Guangdong China

7. School of Freshwater Science University of Wisconsin‐Milwaukee Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

8. State Key Laboratory of Loess and Quaternary Geology, Institute of Earth Environment Chinese Academy of Sciences Xi'an China

9. Department of Agroecology Aarhus University Tjele Denmark

10. College of Environmental and Resource Sciences Zhejiang University Hangzhou China

11. Tianjin Key Laboratory of Water Resources and Environment, School of Geographic and Environmental Sciences Tianjin Normal University Tianjin China

12. School of Geography and Planning Sun Yat‐Sen University Guangzhou China

13. Institute of Geography Fujian Normal University Fuzhou Fujian China

14. Institute of Geography Henan Academy of Sciences Zhengzhou China

15. State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture, Changshu National Agro‐Ecosystem Observation and Research Station, Institute of Soil Science Chinese Academy of Sciences Nanjing China

Abstract

AbstractPaddy fields serve as significant reservoirs of soil organic carbon (SOC) and their potential for terrestrial carbon (C) sequestration is closely associated with changes in SOC pools. However, there has been a dearth of comprehensive studies quantifying changes in SOC pools following extended periods of rice cultivation across a broad geographical scale. Using 104 rice paddy sampling sites that have been in continuous cultivation since the 1980s across China, we studied the changes in topsoil (0–20 cm) labile organic C (LOC I), semi‐labile organic C (LOC II), recalcitrant organic C (ROC), and total SOC. We found a substantial increase in both the content (48%) and density (39%) of total SOC within China's paddy fields between the 1980s to the 2010s. Intriguingly, the rate of increase in content and density of ROC exceeded that of LOC (I and II). Using a structural equation model, we revealed that changes in the content and density of total SOC were mainly driven by corresponding shifts in ROC, which are influenced both directly and indirectly by climatic and soil physicochemical factors; in particular temperature, precipitation, phosphorous (P) and clay content. We also showed that the δ13CLOC were greater than δ13CROC, independent of the rice cropping region, and that there was a significant positive correlation between δ13CSOC and δ13Cstraw. The δ13CLOC and δ13CSOC showed significantly negative correlation with soil total Si, suggesting that soil Si plays a part in the allocation of C into different SOC pools, and its turnover or stabilization. Our study underscores that the global C sequestration of the paddy fields mainly stems from the substantial increase in ROC pool.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Guizhou University

Publisher

Wiley

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