Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2022)

Substantial carbon loss respired from a corn–soybean agroecosystem highlights the importance of careful management as we adapt to changing climate

  • Caitlin E Moore,
  • Christy D Gibson,
  • Guofang Miao,
  • Evan C Dracup,
  • Nuria Gomez-Casanovas,
  • Michael D Masters,
  • Jesse Miller,
  • Adam C von Haden,
  • Tilden Meyers,
  • Evan H DeLucia,
  • Carl J Bernacchi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac661a
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
p. 054029

Abstract

Read online

Understanding agroecosystem carbon (C) cycle response to climate change and management is vital for maintaining their long-term C storage. We demonstrate this importance through an in-depth examination of a ten-year eddy covariance dataset from a corn–corn–soybean crop rotation grown in the Midwest United States. Ten-year average annual net ecosystem exchange (NEE) showed a net C sink of −0.39 Mg C ha ^−1 yr ^−1 . However, NEE in 2014 and 2015 from the corn ecosystem was 3.58 and 2.56 Mg C ha ^−1 yr ^−1 , respectively. Most C loss occurred during the growing season, when photosynthesis should dominate and C fluxes should reflect a net ecosystem gain. Partitioning NEE into gross primary productivity (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (ER) showed this C ‘burp’ was driven by higher ER, with a 51% (2014) and 57% (2015) increase from the ten-year average (15.84 Mg C ha ^−1 yr ^−1 ). GPP was also higher than average (16.24 Mg C ha ^−1 yr ^−1 ) by 25% (2014) and 37% (2015), but this was not enough to offset the C emitted from ER. This increased ER was likely driven by enhanced soil microbial respiration associated with ideal growing season climate, substrate availability, nutrient additions, and a potential legacy effect from drought.

Keywords