Abstract

AbstractThe Mojave Desert has warmed >2°C, and aridified, in the past 50 years, making it a strategic location to investigate climate change impacts on arid soil processes. We resampled a climosequence of soils in the Mojave first sampled in 1973 and compared current soil properties to those 45+ years earlier. Radiocarbon changes revealed that C is cycling rapidly through the soils, particularly near the surface, with a temperature‐sensitive decomposition rate (Arrhenius Ea = 66 kJ/mol). Significant decreases in soil C/N ratios and increases in δ15N values occurred, suggestive of enhanced rates of soil C and N cycling and their losses. Covariation between changes in soil radiocarbon, δ13C, δ15N, and C/N point toward emerging chemical impacts on the coupled C and N cycles in response to climate change.

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