Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter?

A diversity of agricultural practices and systems enable the accrual of soil organic C (SOC) stocks, with variable efficiencies. These C-storing practices increase SOC stocks, either by increasing the inputs of plant biomass or exogenous organic matter, or by decreasing the outputs of SOC reducing SOC mineralisation rates, or both. In the perspective of contributing to climate change mitigation, the temporal stability of the additional SOC stored is critical. Different approaches can be used to assess the stability of soil organic matter, such as physical fractionation of soil organic matter, chemical extractions, long term incubations and analysis of the thermal behaviour of the organic matter using RockEval© pyrolysis. These address contrasting residence times, such as of months to years (long term incubations), to several decades and centuries (particle size fractionation, RockEval© pyrolysis coupled with PARTYSOC model) We used the literature and long-term agricultural experiments in which management options (application of exogenous organic matter, conservation agriculture, organic agriculture, agroforestry) result in increased SOC stocks. We investigated the stability of the additional SOC stored, compared to the reference management option. Methods currently used in the literature to assess the temporal stability of soil organic matter do not address the same SOC kinetic pools. Care must be taken to specify which range of residence times is considered when using any method intending to evaluate the biogeochemical stability of soil organic matter, as well as when using the terms stable or labile. Management options result in slightly contrasted stability of the additional organic carbon, the application of exogenous organic matter resulting in the most stable additional carbon, compared to management options that increase belowground plant biomass inputs to soil. Carbon storing agricultural management options mobilize different stabilization processes of soil organic matter: chemical recalcitrance, organo-mineral interactions and physical protection.

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Main Authors: Chenu, Claire, Kpemoua, Kossi, Cardinael, Rémi, Houot, Sabine, Baudin, François, Chevallier, Tiphaine, Barré, Pierre
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: IFPEN
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609272/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609272/1/Chenu%20et%20al%202024-01-25-CET%20symp.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-6092722024-04-22T14:19:27Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609272/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609272/ Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter? Chenu Claire, Kpemoua Kossi, Cardinael Rémi, Houot Sabine, Baudin François, Chevallier Tiphaine, Barré Pierre. 2024. In : Abstract book SoilCET 2024. IFPEN, INRAE. Rueil-Malmaison : IFPEN-INRAE, Résumé, 1 p. SoilCET 2024 International Symposium, Rueil-Malmaison, France, 24 Janvier 2024/26 Janvier 2024.https://www.soilcet.com/sessions <https://www.soilcet.com/sessions> Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter? Chenu, Claire Kpemoua, Kossi Cardinael, Rémi Houot, Sabine Baudin, François Chevallier, Tiphaine Barré, Pierre eng 2024 IFPEN Abstract book SoilCET 2024 A diversity of agricultural practices and systems enable the accrual of soil organic C (SOC) stocks, with variable efficiencies. These C-storing practices increase SOC stocks, either by increasing the inputs of plant biomass or exogenous organic matter, or by decreasing the outputs of SOC reducing SOC mineralisation rates, or both. In the perspective of contributing to climate change mitigation, the temporal stability of the additional SOC stored is critical. Different approaches can be used to assess the stability of soil organic matter, such as physical fractionation of soil organic matter, chemical extractions, long term incubations and analysis of the thermal behaviour of the organic matter using RockEval© pyrolysis. These address contrasting residence times, such as of months to years (long term incubations), to several decades and centuries (particle size fractionation, RockEval© pyrolysis coupled with PARTYSOC model) We used the literature and long-term agricultural experiments in which management options (application of exogenous organic matter, conservation agriculture, organic agriculture, agroforestry) result in increased SOC stocks. We investigated the stability of the additional SOC stored, compared to the reference management option. Methods currently used in the literature to assess the temporal stability of soil organic matter do not address the same SOC kinetic pools. Care must be taken to specify which range of residence times is considered when using any method intending to evaluate the biogeochemical stability of soil organic matter, as well as when using the terms stable or labile. Management options result in slightly contrasted stability of the additional organic carbon, the application of exogenous organic matter resulting in the most stable additional carbon, compared to management options that increase belowground plant biomass inputs to soil. Carbon storing agricultural management options mobilize different stabilization processes of soil organic matter: chemical recalcitrance, organo-mineral interactions and physical protection. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609272/1/Chenu%20et%20al%202024-01-25-CET%20symp.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html https://www.soilcet.com/sessions info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/purl/https://www.soilcet.com/sessions
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description A diversity of agricultural practices and systems enable the accrual of soil organic C (SOC) stocks, with variable efficiencies. These C-storing practices increase SOC stocks, either by increasing the inputs of plant biomass or exogenous organic matter, or by decreasing the outputs of SOC reducing SOC mineralisation rates, or both. In the perspective of contributing to climate change mitigation, the temporal stability of the additional SOC stored is critical. Different approaches can be used to assess the stability of soil organic matter, such as physical fractionation of soil organic matter, chemical extractions, long term incubations and analysis of the thermal behaviour of the organic matter using RockEval© pyrolysis. These address contrasting residence times, such as of months to years (long term incubations), to several decades and centuries (particle size fractionation, RockEval© pyrolysis coupled with PARTYSOC model) We used the literature and long-term agricultural experiments in which management options (application of exogenous organic matter, conservation agriculture, organic agriculture, agroforestry) result in increased SOC stocks. We investigated the stability of the additional SOC stored, compared to the reference management option. Methods currently used in the literature to assess the temporal stability of soil organic matter do not address the same SOC kinetic pools. Care must be taken to specify which range of residence times is considered when using any method intending to evaluate the biogeochemical stability of soil organic matter, as well as when using the terms stable or labile. Management options result in slightly contrasted stability of the additional organic carbon, the application of exogenous organic matter resulting in the most stable additional carbon, compared to management options that increase belowground plant biomass inputs to soil. Carbon storing agricultural management options mobilize different stabilization processes of soil organic matter: chemical recalcitrance, organo-mineral interactions and physical protection.
format conference_item
author Chenu, Claire
Kpemoua, Kossi
Cardinael, Rémi
Houot, Sabine
Baudin, François
Chevallier, Tiphaine
Barré, Pierre
spellingShingle Chenu, Claire
Kpemoua, Kossi
Cardinael, Rémi
Houot, Sabine
Baudin, François
Chevallier, Tiphaine
Barré, Pierre
Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter?
author_facet Chenu, Claire
Kpemoua, Kossi
Cardinael, Rémi
Houot, Sabine
Baudin, François
Chevallier, Tiphaine
Barré, Pierre
author_sort Chenu, Claire
title Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter?
title_short Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter?
title_full Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter?
title_fullStr Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter?
title_full_unstemmed Storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter?
title_sort storing additional carbon in soil: different practices, different stabilities of the organic matter?
publisher IFPEN
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609272/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/609272/1/Chenu%20et%20al%202024-01-25-CET%20symp.pdf
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