Scientific Reports (Oct 2022)

Interrelationships among mountain relief, surface organic layer, soil organic carbon, and its mineral association under subarctic forest tundra

  • Viliam Pichler,
  • Erika Gömöryová,
  • Ján Merganič,
  • Peter Fleischer,
  • Marián Homolák,
  • Alexander Onuchin,
  • Jozef Výbošťok,
  • Konstantin Prosekin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-21521-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Efforts to estimate the impact of climate change-induced forest expansion on soil carbon stocks in cold regions are hindered by the lack of soil organic carbon (SOC) concentration data. The presented study addressed the information gap by establishing SOC concentration and its variability in two catchments inside the vast, remote, and rugged Putorana Plateau. Additionally, it explored interrelationships among the terrain relief, vegetation cover, surface organic layer, SOC and its mineral association on the northernmost boundary of the forest-tundra biome traversing the northwestern part of the Central Siberian Tableland. Soil samples were taken from the active layer on the slope base, middle, and below the upper forest boundary. Subsequently, they were analyzed for SOC concentration by dry combustion. Multiple linear regression identified associations between slope angle and surface organic layer thickness and between SOC concentration and surface organic layer thickness, clay content, and dithionite-extracted Al. Clay content and surface organic layer thickness explained 68% of the overall SOC concentration variability. When used with data produced by remote sensing-based multipurpose large-scale mapping of selected biophysical factors, the acquired regression equations could aid the estimation of SOC across the rugged terrain of the Siberian Traps.