The Characterization of Biodiversity and Soil Emission Activity of the “Ladoga” Carbon-Monitoring Site

Author:

Abakumov Evgeny1ORCID,Nizamutdinov Timur1ORCID,Zhemchueva Darya1ORCID,Suleymanov Azamat123,Shevchenko Evgeny4,Koptseva Elena15,Kimeklis Anastasiia16ORCID,Polyakov Vyacheslav1ORCID,Novikova Evgenia1,Gladkov Grigory16,Andronov Evgeny16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Ecology, Faculty of Biology, St. Petersburg State University, 199034 Saint Petersburg, Russia

2. Laboratory of Soil Science, Ufa Institute of Biology, Ufa Federal Research Centre, Russian Academy of Sciences, 450054 Ufa, Russia

3. Department of Environmental Protection and Prudent Exploitation of Natural Resources, Ufa State Petroleum Technological University, 450064 Ufa, Russia

4. Center for Diagnostics of Functional Materials for Medicine, Pharmacology, and Nanoelectronics, St. Petersburg State University, 199034 Saint Petersburg, Russia

5. Department of Vegetation Science and Plant Ecology, St. Petersburg State University, 199034 Saint Petersburg, Russia

6. All-Russia Research Institute for Agricultural Microbiology (ARRIAM), 196608 Saint Petersburg, Russia

Abstract

The global climate crisis forces mankind to develop carbon storage technologies. “Ladoga” carbon monitoring site is part of the Russian climate project “Carbon Supersites”, which aims to develop methods and technologies to control the balance of greenhouse gases in various ecosystems. This article shows the condition of soil and vegetation cover of the carbon polygon “Ladoga” using the example of a typical southern taiga ecosystem in the Leningrad region (Russia). It is revealed that soils here are significantly disturbed as a result of agrogenic impact, and the vegetation cover changes under the influence of anthropogenic activity. It has been found that a considerable amount of carbon is deposited in the soils of the carbon polygon; its significant part is accumulated in peat soils (60.0 ± 19.8 kg × m−2 for 0–100 cm layer). In agrogenically disturbed and pristine soils, carbon stocks are equal to 12.8 ± 2.9 kg × m−2 and 8.3 ± 1.3 kg × m−2 in the 0–100 cm layer, respectively. Stocks of potentially mineralizable organic matter (0–10 cm) in peat soils are 0.48 ± 0.01 kg × m−2; in pristine soils, it is 0.58 ± 0.06 kg × m−2. Peat soils are characterized by a higher intensity of carbon mineralization 9.2 ± 0.1 mg × 100 g−1 × day−1 with greater stability. Carbon in pristine soils is mineralized with a lower rate—2.5 ± 0.2 mg × 100 g−1 × day−1. The study of microbial diversity of soils revealed that the dominant phyla of microorganisms are Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Proteobacteria; however, methane-producing Archaea—Euryarchaeota—were found in peat soils, indicating their potentially greater emission activity. The results of this work will be useful for decision makers and can be used as a reference for estimating the carbon balance of the Leningrad region and southern taiga boreal ecosystems of the Karelian Isthmus.

Funder

St Petersburg University

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference72 articles.

1. Approaches and Methods for Studying Soil Organic Matter in the Carbon Polygons of Russia (Review);Abakumov;Eurasian Soil Sci.,2022

2. (2024, January 10). Carbon Supersites. Russian Federation. Available online: https://carbon-polygons.ru/en/.

3. The role of soil carbon in natural climate solutions;Bossio;Nat. Sustain.,2020

4. Polyakov, V., Abakumov, E., Nizamutdinov, T., Shevchenko, E., and Makarova, M. (2023). Estimation of Carbon Stocks and Stabilization Rates of Organic Matter in Soils of the «Ladoga» Carbon Monitoring Site. Agronomy, 13.

5. From carbon polygon to carbon farm: The potential and ways of developing the sequestration carbon industry in the Leningrad Region and St. Petersburg;Makarova;Earth Sci.,2023

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