Noponen, M.R.A., Healey, J.R., Soto, G., Haggar, J.P., 2013. Sink or source-The potential of coffee agroforestry systems to sequester atmospheric CO2 into soil organic carbon. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 175, 60-68.
Highlights
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SOC stocks decreased by 12.4% in Costa Rica and 0.13% in Nicaragua after establishment of coffee AFS.
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SOC stocks increased in the top 10 cm of soil; greater reduction occurred at 20–40 cm.
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Organic management caused a greater increase in 0–10 cm SOC but did not influence reduction at depth.
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Shade type effects on SOC were smaller; no significant difference between shaded and unshaded coffee.
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SOC stocks tend to converge on a level determined by site environment during establishment.
Abstract
Current
carbon accounting methodologies often assume interactions between
above-ground and below-ground carbon, without considering effects of
land management. We used data from two long-term coffee agroforestry
experiments in Costa Rica and Nicaragua to assess the effect on total
soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks of (i) organic versus conventional
management, (ii) higher versus moderate agronomic inputs, (iii) tree
shade types. During the first nine years of coffee establishment total
0–40 cm depth SOC stocks decreased by 12.4% in Costa Rica and 0.13% in
Nicaragua. Change in SOC differed consistently amongst soil layers: at
0–10 cm SOC stocks increased by 2.14 and 1.26 Mg C ha−1 in Costa Rica and Nicaragua respectively; however much greater reduction occurred at 20–40 cm (9.65 and 2.85 Mg C ha−1
respectively). Organic management caused a greater increase in 0–10 cm
SOC but did not influence its reduction at depth. Effects of shade type
were smaller, though heavily pruned legume shade trees produced a
greater increase in 0–10 cm SOC than unpruned timber trees. No
significant differences in SOC stocks were found between shaded and
unshaded systems at any depth and SOC was poorly correlated with
above-ground biomass stocks highlighting poor validity of “expansion
factors” currently used to estimate SOC. SOC stock changes were
significantly negatively correlated with initial SOC stock per plot,
providing evidence that during establishment of these
woody-plant-dominated agricultural systems SOC stocks tend to converge
towards a new equilibrium as a function of the change in the quantity
and distribution of organic inputs. Therefore it cannot be assumed that
tree-based agricultural systems necessarily lead to increases in soil C
stocks. While high inputs of organic fertiliser/tree pruning mulch
increased surface-layer SOC stocks, this did not affect stocks in deeper
soil, where decreases generally exceeded any gains in surface soil.
Therefore site- and system-specific sampling is essential to draw
meaningful conclusions for climate change mitigation strategies.
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