Estimating Soil Carbon Fluxes Following Land-Cover Change: A Test of Some Critical Assumptions for a Region in Costa Rica
| Author: | Jennifer S. Powers, Jane M. Read, Julie S. Denslow, Sandra M. Guzman |
|---|---|
| Date: | January 2004 |
| Publication: | Global Change Biology, 10, pp. 170-181 |
Changes in soil carbon storage that accompany land-cover change may have significant
effects on the global carbon cycle. The objective of this work was to examine how
assumptions about preconversion soil C storage and the effects of land-cover change
influence estimates of regional soil C storage. We applied three models of land-cover
change effects to two maps of preconversion soil C in a 140 000 ha area of northeastern
Costa Rica. One preconversion soil C map was generated using values assigned to
tropical wet forest from the literature, the second used values obtained from extensive
field sampling. The first model of land-cover change effects used values that are typically
applied in global assessments, the second and third models used field data but differed
in how the data were aggregated (one was based on land-cover transitions and one was
based on terrain attributes). Changes in regional soil C storage were estimated for each
combination of model and preconversion soil C for three time periods defined by georeferenced
land-cover maps.
The estimated regional soil C under forest vegetation (to 0.3 m) was higher in the map
based on field data (10.03 Tg C) than in the map based on literature data (8.90 Tg C),
although the range of values derived from propagating estimation errors was large (7.67–
12.40 Tg C). Regional soil C storage declined through time due to forest clearing for
pasture and crops. Estimated CO2 fluxes depended more on the model of land-cover
change effects than on preconversion soil C. Cumulative soil C losses (1950–1996) under
the literature model of land-cover effects exceeded estimates based on field data by
factors of 3.8–8.0. In order to better constrain regional and global-scale assessments of
carbon fluxes from soils in the tropics, future research should focus on methods for
extrapolating regional-scale constraints on soil C dynamics to larger spatial and temporal
scales.
