DBGPrints-Archiv
Publikationen der Deutschen Bodenkundlichen Gesellschaft

Degradation mechanisms and consequences for SOC stocks for the world's largest alpine pastoral ecosystem on the Tibetan Plateau

Schleuss, P. M. und Lehnert, L. und Miehe, G. und Heitkamp, F. und Seeber, E. und Liu, S. und Spielvogel, S. und Guggenberger, G. und Kuzyakov, Y. (2017) Degradation mechanisms and consequences for SOC stocks for the world's largest alpine pastoral ecosystem on the Tibetan Plateau. In: Jahrestagung der DBG 2017: Horizonte des Bodens, 02.-07.09.2017, Göttingen.

[img]
Vorschau
PDF
Herunterladen (12kB) | Vorschau

Kurzfassung

Approximately 1.5 million km² of the Tibetan Plateau are covered with grasslands. Thereof one third is occupied by the world’s largest pastoral alpine ecosystem (Kobresia pastures). Paleo-records indicate the grazing-induced origin of this ecosystem since more than 8000 years or at least since yak domestication since 4000 years. Long-term moderate grazing by yak and sheep increased belowground C allocation of Kobresia pygmaea, caused the development of dense root-mats and finally lead to an accumulation of soil organic carbon (SOC) and nutrients such as nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) in the topsoil. These pastures, however, are increasingly affected by large-scale degradation caused by overgrazing of these highly sensitive ecosystems. Loss of the topsoil threatens several ecosystem functions: i.e. SOC and nutrient storage, biodiversity, provision of grazing-ground and supply of clean water for large parts of SE-Asia. Here, we present a conceptual model and results of degradation processes combining anthropogenic and natural amplifications. To evaluate losses of SOC and nutrients we synthesize field observations and surveys in the highlands and validates this with own analyses in the Kobresia core area. We show that drought- and frost-induced polygonal cracking opens the root-mats, already weakened by overgrazing. This initiates a dying of the Kobresia turf, extends the surface cracks, triggers soil erosion and promotes SOC mineralization and leaching losses. Soil erosion caused further high losses of SOC and nutrients from the topsoil (i.e. 0-10 cm: ~5.1 kg C m-2), whereas SOC loss beneath the surface cracks was primary caused by both, decreasing C-input and SOC mineralization (mineralization-derived SOC loss: ~2.5 kg C m-2). The root biomass decreased with intensity of pasture degradation and lower C input constrains the ecosystem recovery. A negative δ13C shift of SOC reflected intensive decomposition and corresponded to a relative enrichment of 13C depleted lignin components. In sum, degradation triggered high SOC loss (up to 70% of intact soil in 0-30 cm: ~7.6 kg C m-2) from this ecosystem with profound consequences for carbon sequestration, atmospheric CO2, water quality and ecosystem stability.

Eintragstyp: Konferenz- oder Workshop-Beitrag ("Berichte der DBG")
Stichwörter: Landnutzung und Kohlenstoffhaushalt
Bereiche: Kommissionen > Kommission IV: Bodenfruchtbarkeit und Pflanzenernährung
Benutzer: Unnamed user with email dbg@dbges.de
Hinterlegungsdatum: 19 Mär 2018 21:23
Letzte Änderung: 19 Mär 2018 21:23
URI: https://eprints.dbges.de/id/eprint/1513

Aktionen (Anmeldung erforderlich)

Eintrag anzeigen Eintrag anzeigen