Abstract

Dynamics of soil organic carbon (SOC) are associated with soil erosion, yet there is a shortage of research concerning the relationship between soil erosion, SOC, and especially microbial biomass carbon (MBC). In this paper, we selected two typical slope landscapes including gentle and steep slopes from the Sichuan Basin, China, and used the 137Cs technique to determine the effects of water erosion and tillage erosion on the dynamics of SOC and MBC. Soil samples for the determination of 137Cs, SOC, MBC and soil particle-size fractions were collected on two types of contrasting hillslopes. 137Cs data revealed that soil loss occurred at upper slope positions of the two landscapes and soil accumulation at the lower slope positions. Soil erosion rates as well as distribution patterns of the <0.002-mm clay shows that water erosion is the major process of soil redistribution in the gentle slope landscape, while tillage erosion acts as the dominant process of soil redistribution in the steep slope landscape. In gentle slope landscapes, both SOC and MBC contents increased downslope and these distribution patterns were closely linked to soil redistribution rates. In steep slope landscapes, only SOC contents increased downslope, dependent on soil redistribution. It is noticeable that MBC/SOC ratios were significantly lower in gentle slope landscapes than in steep slope landscapes, implying that water erosion has a negative effect on the microbial biomass compared with tillage erosion. It is suggested that MBC dynamics are closely associated with soil redistribution by water erosion but independent of that by tillage erosion, while SOC dynamics are influenced by soil redistribution by both water erosion and tillage erosion.

Highlights

  • Soil erosion has a severe impact on soil organic carbon (SOC) pools, and as a consequence affects the soil carbon cycle

  • This study aims to (1) compare the difference in soil erosion between the two different slope landscapes, (2) examine spatial patterns of SOC and microbial biomass carbon (MBC) distribution over eroded slopes, and (3) elucidate effects of water erosion and tillage erosion on the dynamics of SOC and MBC

  • The results indicate that tillage erosion dominates the process of soil redistribution in steep slope landscapes, whereas water erosion is a major process of soil redistribution in gentle slope landscapes

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Summary

Introduction

Soil erosion has a severe impact on soil organic carbon (SOC) pools, and as a consequence affects the soil carbon cycle. Water erosion was assumed to be a major soil disturbance in agricultural slope landscapes. Numerous studies have emphasized the influences of water erosion on SOC removal and carbon sequestration in agricultural slope landscapes [1,2,3,4,5,6]. The impacts of tillage erosion on within-field variability of SOC have recently been addressed [12,13,14]. On steep hillslopes of the Sichuan Basin, China, there is a complete depletion of SOC at summit positions and remarkable accumulation at bottom positions after 15-yr tillage erosion [14]

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