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Research Papers

Soil carbon stock assessment using depth and spatial models on afforested arable lands

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 235-247 | Received 31 Dec 2021, Accepted 16 May 2022, Published online: 30 Sep 2022
 

Abstract

The change from grasslands and natural shrubs to afforested arable land has a major impact on soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks. Grasslands are known to be SOC sinks as seen in the Chernozems of North America, Eurasia and South Africa. However, determining the SOC stocks of soils can be financially costly as each location must be sampled in depth increments. This study aimed to estimate the SOC stocks for the Mvoti catchment (30° 48′ E and 29° 18′ S) in Kwa-Zulu Natal, South Africa by developing depth functions on a limited number of soil samples and expanding these functions to known land-uses and soil types. The results showed that splines captured the short-term vertical distribution of SOC better than exponential decay functions, which has major implications on arable lands. Long-term forest plantations showed a positive correlation with SOC stocks (32.7 kg m−2), while annual crop cultivation (27.0 kg m−2) showed a negative correlation when compared to natural grasslands (28.8 kg m−2). The Cubist algorithm predicted the total SOC stock of the catchment area at between 12 248 and 17 624 Mg depending on the depth function used. Soils with yellow-brown subsoils tend to have higher SOC stocks and the lowest degree of uncertainty.

Acknowledgements

This research was funded by the South African National Research Foundation grant number SFH170525233469 and the EU LIFE programme grant number LIFE 17/IPE/CZ/000005. We would also like to thank the Mondi Forest for supplying the data.

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