Carbon storage in the soils and vegetation of contrasting land uses in northern New South Wales, Australia

Title
Carbon storage in the soils and vegetation of contrasting land uses in northern New South Wales, Australia
Publication Date
2005
Author(s)
Young, Rick
Wilson, Brian
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7983-0909
Email: bwilson7@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:bwilson7
McLeod, Malem K
Alston, Clair
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
Place of publication
Australia
DOI
10.1071/SR04032
UNE publication id
une:9223
Abstract
The organic carbon stock in biomass and soil profiles sampled from nearby paddocks with different land-use histories was estimated at 7 sites in the upper Liverpool Plains catchment and the Manilla district of north-western New South Wales, Australia. The distribution of soil carbon concentrations over a depth of 2 m was significantly affected by site and land use. Continuous cultivation and cropping over ≥20 years significantly depleted carbon concentrations compared with grassy woodlands in the surface 0.20 m at all sites and to a depth of 0.60 m at 3 sites. Depth of sampling (0-0.20 v. 0-1.0 m) significantly affected the differences between land uses at most sites regarding estimates of the stock of soil carbon. These results show that differences in soil carbon concentrations and stock size do not remain constant with depth between contrasting land uses. However, comparisons between land uses of the total amount of carbon stored were dominated by the number of trees per ha and the size of the trees in grassy woodlands. The implications of these results for carbon accounting are discussed.
Link
Citation
Australian Journal of Soil Research, 43(1), p. 21-31
ISSN
0004-9573
1446-568X
1838-6768
1838-675X
Start page
21
End page
31

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