Soil carbon dynamics: The effects of nitrogen input, intake demand and off-take by animals
Loading...
Permanent Link
Publisher link
Rights
Abstract
Elucidation of the drivers of soil carbon (C) change is required to enable decisions to be made on how to achieve soil C sequestration. Interactions between different components in the ecosystem in combination with feedback mechanisms mean that identifying drivers through conventional experimental approaches or by retro-fitting models to data are unlikely to result in the insights needed for the future. This paper explains soil C dynamics by using a process-based model. Drivers considered in the model include nitrogen (N) fertiliser inputs, intake demand, and off-take of animal products. The effect of the grazing animal in uncoupling the C and N cycles is explained, plus the implications of the farming system ('drystock' versus milk). The model enables depiction of the dynamic equilibrium achieved with time when a proposed change in the drivers is sustained. The results show that soil C loss under lactating cows is a result of N, rather than C, being removed in milk. Counter-intuitively, at the same intake demand, N loss under 'milk' is less than under 'dry-stock', as is C loss in animal respiration. Possibilities for changing the longevity of C in the soil are discussed, and the compromise between food production, N loss and C sequestration is considered.
Citation
Parsons, A. J., Thornley, J. H. M., Newton, P. C. D., Rasmussen, S., & Rowarth, J. S. (2013). Soil carbon dynamics: The effects of nitrogen input, intake demand and off-take by animals. Science of The Total Environment, first published 4 March 2013
Type
Series name
Date
Publisher
Elsevier