Abstract

The dynamics of the soil organic carbon (SOC) pool and the mechanisms that underpin those dynamics are at the frontier of terrestrial carbon (C) cycling research. Soil erosion seriously affects the migration and redistribution of SOC, driving a critical part of the C cycle. In this study, soil samples were collected from a 14.69 m sediment profile formed between 1960 and 2017, which was located in a small agricultural catchment on the Loess Plateau in northwest China. Nuclear tracer elements (137Cs, 210Pb) and stable C isotopes (δ13C) from organic matter were used to quantitatively identify the SOC sources in different siltation stages. The method used assumes that the contribution of a source is proportional to the elemental concentration in that source. SOC in soil samples from different erosion source areas (farmland, forest land, grassland, shrub land and ditch wall) were compared against the deposit in the check dam. The concentration of SOC in the sediments of the check dam was between 1.21 g kg−1 and 4.03 g kg−1. Nearly half of the SOC in the check dam sediments was traced back to the ditch wall. Farmland contributed 24.8 %, while shrub land contributed the least SOC at 0.4 %. SOC erosion attributed to farmland decreased gradually, while the relative contribution from the ditch wall increased. Within the agricultural catchment area, there was a net migration of SOC from the various land cover types (the source) to the sedimentary area behind the dam (the sink). These results indicate that a dynamic balance exists between redistribution and heterotopic storage of SOC during sedimentation. This study provides an opinion for sediment source identification and the soil C cycle in watersheds on the Loess Plateau.

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