Soil carbon inventories under a bioenergy crop (switchgrass): Measurement limitations

被引:123
|
作者
Garten, CT [1 ]
Wullschleger, SD [1 ]
机构
[1] Oak Ridge Natl Lab, Div Environm Sci, Oak Ridge, TN 37831 USA
关键词
D O I
10.2134/jeq1999.00472425002800040041x
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Approximately 5 yr after planting, coarse root (>2 mm) carbon (C) and soil organic C (SOC) inventories (0-10 cm deep) were compared under different types of plant cover at four switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) production field trials in the southeastern USA. There was significantly (p less than or equal to 0.05) more coarse root C under switchgrass (Alamo variety) and forest col-er than under tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.), corn (Zea mays L,), or native pastures of mixed grasses. Inventories of SOC under switchgrass were not significantly greater than SOC inventories under other plant covers. At some locations the statistical power associated with ANOVA of SOC inventories was low, which raised questions about whether differences in SOC could be detected statistically. A minimum detectable difference (MDD) for SOC inventories was calculated. The MDD is the smallest detectable difference between treatment means once the variation, significance level, statistical power, and sample size are specified. The analysis indicated that a difference of approximate to 50 mg SOC/cm(2) or 5 Mg SOC/ ha, which is approximate to 10 to 15% of existing SOC, could be detected with reasonable sample sizes (n = 16) and good statistical power (1 - beta = 0.90). The smallest difference in SOC inventories that can be detected, and only with exceedingly large sample sizes (n > 100), is approximate to 2 to 3% (approximate to 10 mg SOC/cm(2) or 1 Mg SOC/ha), These measurement limitations have implications for monitoring and verification of proposals to ameliorate increasing global atmospheric CO2 concentrations by sequestering C in soils.
引用
收藏
页码:1359 / 1365
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Soil Organic Carbon Pools Under Switchgrass Grown as a Bioenergy Crop Compared to Other Conventional Crops
    F.G.DOU
    F.M.HONS
    W.R.OCUMPAUGH
    J.C.READ
    M.A.HUSSEY
    J.P.MUIR
    [J]. Pedosphere, 2013, 23 (04) : 409 - 416
  • [2] Soil Organic Carbon Pools Under Switchgrass Grown as a Bioenergy Crop Compared to Other Conventional Crops
    Dou, F. G.
    Hons, F. M.
    Ocumpaugh, W. R.
    Read, J. C.
    Hussey, M. A.
    Muir, J. P.
    [J]. PEDOSPHERE, 2013, 23 (04) : 409 - 416
  • [3] Soil Organic Carbon Pools Under Switchgrass Grown as a Bioenergy Crop Compared to Other Conventional Crops
    FGDOU
    FMHONS
    WROCUMPAUGH
    JCREAD
    MAHUSSEY
    JPMUIR
    [J]. Pedosphere, 2013, (04) : 409 - 416
  • [4] Soil Carbon Storage by Switchgrass Grown for Bioenergy
    M. A. Liebig
    M. R. Schmer
    K. P. Vogel
    R. B. Mitchell
    [J]. BioEnergy Research, 2008, 1 : 215 - 222
  • [5] Soil Carbon Storage by Switchgrass Grown for Bioenergy
    Liebig, M. A.
    Schmer, M. R.
    Vogel, K. P.
    Mitchell, R. B.
    [J]. BIOENERGY RESEARCH, 2008, 1 (3-4) : 215 - 222
  • [6] Switchgrass as a sustainable bioenergy crop
    Sanderson, MA
    Reed, RL
    McLaughlin, SB
    Wullschleger, SD
    Conger, BV
    Parrish, DJ
    Wolf, DD
    Taliaferro, C
    Hopkins, AA
    Ocumpaugh, WR
    Hussey, MA
    Read, JC
    Tischler, CR
    [J]. BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY, 1996, 56 (01) : 83 - 93
  • [7] Cover crop effects on soil carbon and nitrogen under bioenergy sorghum crops
    Sainju, U. M.
    Singh, H. P.
    Singh, B. P.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION, 2015, 70 (06) : 410 - 417
  • [8] Control of floral transition in the bioenergy crop switchgrass
    Niu, Lifang
    Fu, Chunxiang
    Lin, Hao
    Wolabu, Tezera W.
    Wu, Yanqi
    Wang, Zeng-Yu
    Tadege, Million
    [J]. PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 2016, 39 (10): : 2158 - 2171
  • [9] Soil Carbon Sequestration by Switchgrass and No-Till Maize Grown for Bioenergy
    Follett, Ronald F.
    Vogel, Kenneth P.
    Varvel, Gary E.
    Mitchell, Robert B.
    Kimble, John
    [J]. BIOENERGY RESEARCH, 2012, 5 (04) : 866 - 875
  • [10] Soil Carbon Sequestration by Switchgrass and No-Till Maize Grown for Bioenergy
    Ronald F. Follett
    Kenneth P. Vogel
    Gary E. Varvel
    Robert B. Mitchell
    John Kimble
    [J]. BioEnergy Research, 2012, 5 : 866 - 875