How does management affect soil C sequestration and greenhouse gas fluxes in boreal and temperate forests? – A review - Diversité et Fonctionnement : des Molécules aux Ecosystèmes Access content directly
Journal Articles Forest Ecology and Management Year : 2023

How does management affect soil C sequestration and greenhouse gas fluxes in boreal and temperate forests? – A review

Abstract

The global forest carbon (C) stock is estimated at 662 Gt of which 45% is in soil organic matter. Thus, comprehensive understanding of the effects of forest management practices on forest soil C stock and greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes is needed for the development of effective forest-based climate change mitigation strategies. To improve this understanding, we synthesized peer-reviewed literature on forest management practices that can mitigate climate change by increasing soil C stocks and reducing GHG emissions. We further identified soil processes that affect soil GHG balance and discussed how models represent forest management effects on soil in GHG inventories and scenario analyses to address forest climate change mitigation potential. Forest management effects depend strongly on the specific practice and land type. Intensive timber harvesting with removal of harvest residues/stumps results in a reduction in soil C stock, while high stocking density and enhanced productivity by fertilization or dominance of coniferous species increase soil C stock. Nitrogen fertilization increases the soil C stock and N2O emissions while decreasing the CH4 sink. Peatland hydrology management is a major driver of the GHG emissions of the peatland forests, with lower water level corresponding to higher CO2 emissions. Furthermore, the global warming potential of all GHG emissions (CO2, CH4 and N2O) together can be ten-fold higher after clear-cutting than in peatlands with standing trees. The climate change mitigation potential of forest soils, as estimated by modelling approaches, accounts for stand biomass driven effects and climate factors that affect the decomposition rate. A future challenge is to account for the effects of soil preparation and other management that affects soil processes by changing soil temperature, soil moisture, soil nutrient balance, microbial community structure and processes, hydrology and soil oxygen concentration in the models. We recommend that soil monitoring and modelling focus on linking processes of soil C stabilization with the functioning of soil microbiota.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
Makipaa_etal_FEM_How_Does_Management_VOR.pdf (1.31 Mo) Télécharger le fichier
Origin : Publisher files allowed on an open archive
licence : CC BY - Attribution

Dates and versions

hal-04051206 , version 1 (23-02-2024)

Licence

Attribution

Identifiers

Cite

Raisa Mäkipää, Rose Z Abramoff, Bartosz Adamczyk, Virginie Baldy, Charlotte Biryol, et al.. How does management affect soil C sequestration and greenhouse gas fluxes in boreal and temperate forests? – A review. Forest Ecology and Management, 2023, 529, pp.120637. ⟨10.1016/j.foreco.2022.120637⟩. ⟨hal-04051206⟩
78 View
22 Download

Altmetric

Share

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More