Abstract

As an important blue carbon pool, the content, dynamics, and related hydrological environment of coastal soil organic carbon (SOC) are extremely vulnerable to coastal reclamation; however, a full understanding of this is still lacking, mainly due to the heterogeneity in space. In this study, a dataset encompassing 680 samples gathered from 128 literatures related to SOC variation in China’s coastal areas has been constructed. Moreover, meta-analysis combined with structural equation model have been adopted to quantitatively explore the characteristics and causal mechanism of SOC change following reclamation. The results show that: (1) After reclamation, reclamation history has become an overriding control variable dominating all environmental factors, including soil physical and biochemical factors, and directly alters the content and dynamics of SOC. The SOC has tended to decrease substantially within first 10 years after reclamation and then increase significantly over time. After reclamation, forest and paddy generally have a positive effect on SOC. (2) In natural saltmarshes (before reclamation), soil biochemical factors are the dominant forces driving SOC. However, after reclamation, soil physical factors have played an increasingly important role in SOC variation, of which soil moisture is a relatively important contributor. Total nitrogen is another driving force controlling the variation of SOC acting as a gate valve role. (3) For coastal carbon sequestration, cultivating terricolous salt-tolerant vegetation to establish integrated high salinity eco-system in reclaimed zones, wetland silting promotion projects should be encouraged in natural salt marshes. And, land uses of forest and paddy should be popularized for promoting SOC in reclaimed zones.

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