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Deep soil flipping increases carbon stocks of New Zealand grasslands.

Global Change Biology 2019 Februrary 9
Sequestration of soil organic carbon (SOC) has been recognised as an opportunity to off-set global carbon dioxide (CO2 ) emissions. Flipping (full inversion to 1-3 m) is a practice used on New Zealand's South Island West Coast to eliminate water-logging in highly podzolized sandy soils. Flipping results in burial of SOC formed in surface soil horizons into the subsoil and the transfer of subsoil material low in SOC to the "new" topsoil. The aims of this study were to quantify changes in the storage and stability of SOC over a 20 year period following flipping of high productive pasture grassland. Topsoils (0-30 cm) from sites representing a chronosequence of flipping (3-20 years old) were sampled (2005/07) and re-sampled (2017) to assess changes in topsoil carbon stocks. Deeper samples (30-150 cm) were also collected (2017) to evaluate changes in stocks of SOC previously buried by flipping. Density fractionation was used to determine SOC stability in recent and buried topsoils. Total SOC stocks (0-150 cm) increased significantly by 69 ± 15 % (179 ± 40 Mg SOC ha-1 ) over 20 years following flipping. Topsoil burial caused a one-time sequestration of 160 ± 14 Mg SOC ha-1 (30-150 cm). The top 0-30 cm accumulated 3.6 Mg SOC ha-1  year-1 . The chronosequence and re-sampling revealed SOC accumulation rates of 1.2-1.8 Mg SOC ha-1  year-1 in the new surface soil (0-15 cm) and a SOC deficit of 36 ± 5 % after 20 years. Flipped subsoils contained up to 32 % labile SOC (compared to <1 % in un-flipped subsoils) thus buried SOC was preserved. This study confirms that burial of SOC and the exposure of SOC depleted subsoil results in an overall increase of SOC stocks of the whole soil profile and long-term SOC preservation. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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