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Effects of diversity, climate and litter on soil organic carbon storage in subtropical forests

  • Yin Li
  • , Xiaojuan Liu
  • , Wubing Xu
  • , Franca J. Bongers
  • , Weikai Bao
  • , Bin Chen
  • , Guoke Chen
  • , Ke Guo
  • , Jiangshan Lai
  • , Dunmei Lin
  • , Xiangcheng Mi
  • , Xingjun Tian
  • , Xihua Wang
  • , Junhua Yan
  • , Bo Yang
  • , Yuanrun Zheng
  • , Keping Ma*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Sanming University
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • Aarhus University
  • CAS - Chengdu Institute of Biology
  • Shanghai Chenshan Botanical Garden
  • Chongqing University
  • Nanjing University
  • CAS - South China Institute of Botany
  • Jingdezhen University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Tropical and subtropical forest ecosystems play an important role in the global carbon regulation. Although positive relationships between biodiversity and soil organic carbon (SOC) storage have been found in experimental grasslands, biodiversity effects on SOC storage in natural forests remain debated. Based on a large dataset from 523 forest inventory plots across subtropical forests in China, we tested the relationship between biodiversity and SOC storage and examined whether environmental conditions (temperature, precipitation, soil properties) and litter quantity (leaf litter and root biomass) and quality (leaf litter carbon to nitrogen ratio [leaf litter C/N]) had effects on SOC storage. Furthermore, we used linear mixed-effects models to test the relative effects of biodiversity, environmental conditions, and litter quantity and quality on SOC storage. We used structural equation models to test how these variables directly or indirectly affected SOC storage. We found that species diversity, together with climatic factors (mean annual temperature and mean annual precipitation), leaf litter C/N and root biomass determined SOC storage in subtropical forests at a large spatial scale. SOC storage was most strongly affected by climatic factors, followed by leaf litter C/N. Species diversity had both direct and indirect (through root biomass and leaf litter C/N) effects on SOC storage after accounting for environmental conditions. We also found that the positive diversity–SOC storage relationships were stronger in low and medium mean annual precipitation. Our findings highlight that higher species diversity can lead to higher SOC storage and therefore the conservation of biodiversity could play an important role in climate change mitigation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number118479
JournalForest Ecology and Management
Volume476
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Nov 2020

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 13 - Climate Action
    SDG 13 Climate Action

Keywords

  • Biodiversity-ecosystem function
  • Environmental conditions
  • Litter quantity and quality
  • Soil organic carbon storage
  • Subtropical forests

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