Carbon sequestration uncertainty: Is grazing-induced soil organic carbon accrual offset by inorganic carbon loss?

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We used data from a 5-year grazing experiment in the Northern Great Plains of the US. We tested whether grazing management treatments affect SIC, and whether grazing-induced SOC accrual was potentially offset by SIC loss. The experiment had a randomised complete block design and pretreatment data. Response variables were SOC and SIC stocks (0–60 cm depth). Moderate summer grazing (control) is regionally common and treatments that may alter soil stocks included: no grazing, severe summer grazing, moderate autumn grazing, and severe autumn grazing. We also tested for a negative relationship between SOC and SIC across all soil cores (n = 244). Severe grazing (summer and autumn) increased SOC by 0.83 and 0.88 kg × m−2 relative to moderate summer grazing, respectively. However, no treatments affected SIC. Conversely, we found an overall weak but significant (r2 = 0.04, P = 0.002), near one-to-one negative relationship between SIC and SOC stocks of soil cores. Our findings suggest severe grazing can increase SOC without affecting SIC, at least over the short term (5 years). This finding mirrors results from an observational study elsewhere in the Northern Great Plains that also failed to detect grazing effects on SIC. Long-term grazing experiments (>5 years) with pretreatment data may be required to detect grazing effects on SIC.

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