在草原洼地地区用短轮伐柳恢复退化的贫瘠土地并增强气候适应能力:基于自然的潜在解决方案

Shayeb Shahariar , Raju Soolanayakanahally , Angela Bedard-Haughn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

短轮伐柳(SRW)是一种土地管理策略,涉及种植生长迅速、生物量丰富的草本木本植物。这种做法在可再生能源生产、水质保护、碳固存、温室气体(GHG)减排、增强土壤胞外酶活性(EEAs)以及促进整体土壤健康方面具有广阔前景。自流灌溉水稻的快速生长需要大量的水和养分资源,在草原洼地地区(PPR)的边缘河岸土地上种植自流灌溉水稻时,可能会导致地下水位(GWT)深度波动、土壤盐度升高以及生物地球化学循环的破坏。因此,本研究全面评估了在 PPR 建立 SRW 作为退化的边缘河岸土地利用方法的影响,并试图在野外和微观世界尺度上回答涉及生物地球化学循环的土壤水文、盐度、养分、土壤有机碳 (SOC)、温室气体排放和 EEA 的几个重要问题。在一项田间试验中,通过在两个半干旱的 PPR 地点测量 GWT 深度、地下水和土壤电导率 (EC)、常量养分(N、P、K 和 S)以及第一轮轮作(3 年周期)期间不同组分和化学成分中的 SOC 含量,并与邻近的一年生作物和牧草进行比较,评估了 SRW 的影响。在一个微观世界实验中,测量了经过地下水位下降和不同地下水盐度处理的完整土芯中的温室气体(CO2、CH4 和 N2O)排放量和 EEAs [β-葡萄糖苷酶 (BG)、N-乙酰葡萄糖苷酶 (NAG) 和碱性磷酸酶 (AP)]。在不同地点之间,没有观察到土地利用对 GWT 或土壤导电率的一致影响。B 地块的土地利用对 GWT 深度有明显影响,这意味着地形和土壤特性等地块特有的因素可能比土地利用的影响更为重要。在 SRW 条件下,土壤中的宏量营养元素水平各不相同,但并未显著降低土壤的总体养分含量。牧场的总有机碳含量最高;轻组分有机碳和微粒有机碳遵循类似的土地利用模式,即牧场 > SRW = 一年生作物。土地利用对温室气体排放的影响很大,其顺序为牧场 > 一年生作物 = SRW。温室气体排放量随盐度和 GWT 的变化而变化,但与土地利用方式没有交互作用。土壤 EEAs 受不同土地利用方式(即牧场 >;一年生作物 = SRW)的显著影响,表明这些影响来自相关的 SOC。我们的微观世界实验表明,SRW 土地利用方法有望成为一种可持续的 "基于自然的解决方案",以增强泛太平洋区域的气候适应能力。与一年生作物和牧草相比,它的全球升温潜能值较低。因此,在退化的贫瘠土地上广泛实施 SRW 土地利用方法有助于减轻该地区气候变化的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Short rotation willow to restore degraded marginal land and enhance climate resiliency within the Prairie Pothole Region: A potential nature-based solution

Short rotation willow (SRW) is a land management strategy involving the cultivation of rapidly growing, biomass-rich herbaceous-woody plants. This practice holds promise for renewable energy production, water quality preservation, carbon sequestration, greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation, enhancement of soil extracellular enzyme activities (EEAs), and promotion of overall soil health. The rapid growth of SRW demands substantial water and nutrient resources, posing concerns when cultivated in marginal riparian lands within the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR), potentially leading to alterations in groundwater table (GWT) depth fluctuations, elevated soil salinity levels, and disruptions to biogeochemical cycles. Hence, this study comprehensively evaluated the effects of establishing SRW as a degraded marginal riparian land use practice in the PPR and attempted to answer several vital questions in the field and microcosm scale on soil hydrology, salinity, nutrients, soil organic carbon (SOC), GHG emissions, and EEAs involved in biogeochemical cycling. In a field experiment, the effects of SRW were evaluated by measuring the depth to GWT, groundwater and soil electrical conductivity (EC), macronutrients (N, P, K, and S), and SOC content in different fractions and chemical compositions during the first rotation (3-year cycle) compared with adjacent annual crop and pasture in two semi-arid PPR sites. In a microcosm experiment, GHG (CO2, CH4, and N2O) emissions and EEAs [β-glucosidase (BG), N-acetyl glucosaminidase (NAG), and alkaline phosphatase (AP)] were measured in intact soil cores treated with declining water tables and different groundwater salinity levels. No consistent land use impacts on GWT or soil EC were observed between sites. Land use in site B significantly impacted GWT depth, implying site-specific factors, such as topography and soil characteristics, may be dominant over land use effects. Under SRW, the levels of macronutrients in the soil varied but did not significantly reduce the overall nutrient content of the soil. Total SOC was highest in pasture; light fraction organic carbon and particulate organic carbon followed a similar land use pattern, i.e., pasture > SRW = annual crop. Land uses affected GHG emissions significantly in the order of pasture > annual crop = SRW. GHG emission varied with salinity and GWT but there was no interaction with land use practices. Soil EEAs were significantly impacted by different land uses, i.e., pasture > annual crop = SRW, suggesting that the effects resulted from associated SOC. Our microcosm experiment suggests that the SRW land use practice holds promise as a sustainable Nature-Based Solution for enhancing climate resiliency in PPR. It exhibits a lower global warming potential compared to annual crop and pasture. Therefore, widespread implementation of the SRW land use practice in degraded marginal land could help mitigate the effects of climate change in the region.

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