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Library Legacy of human-induced C erosion and burial on soil–atmosphere C exchange

Legacy of human-induced C erosion and burial on soil–atmosphere C exchange

Legacy of human-induced C erosion and burial on soil–atmosphere C exchange

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2012
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201600130382
Pages
19492-19497

Carbon exchange associated with accelerated erosion following land cover change is an important component of the global C cycle. In current assessments, however, this component is not accounted for. Here, we integrate the effects of accelerated C erosion across point, hillslope, and catchment scale for the 780-km ² Dijle River catchment over the period 4000 B.C. to A.D. 2000 to demonstrate that accelerated erosion results in a net C sink. We found this long-term C sink to be equivalent to 43% of the eroded C and to have offset 39% (17–66%) of the C emissions due to anthropogenic land cover change since the advent of agriculture. Nevertheless, the erosion-induced C sink strength is limited by a significant loss of buried C in terrestrial depositional stores, which lagged the burial. The time lag between burial and subsequent loss at this study site implies that the C buried in eroded terrestrial deposits during the agricultural expansion of the last 150 y cannot be assumed to be inert to further destabilization, and indeed might become a significant C source. Our analysis exemplifies that accounting for the non–steady-state C dynamics in geomorphic active systems is pertinent to understanding both past and future anthropogenic global change.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Van Oost, Kristof
Verstraeten, Gert
Doetterl, Sebastian
Notebaert, Bastiaan
Wiaux, François
Broothaerts, Nils
Six, Johan

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