Disentangling the soil and atmospheric stress on carbon sequestration in a Mediterranean pine forest
Rafat Qubaja, Murray Moinester, Joel Kronfeld

TL;DR
This study quantifies organic and inorganic CO2 sequestration in a Mediterranean pine forest, revealing significant effects of irrigation on carbon capture and highlighting the potential of drylands for climate mitigation.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of CO2 sequestration in a semi-arid forest, separating soil and biomass contributions under different water availability conditions.
Findings
Organic carbon sequestration is approximately 550 g CO2/m²/year.
Irrigation increases organic CO2 sequestration by about three times.
Inorganic carbon sequestration is around 216 g CO2/m²/year, mainly via calcite precipitation.
Abstract
Sequestration of atmospheric CO in a Mediterranean semi-arid Aleppo Pine Forest (Pinus halepensis) close to the border of the semi-arid timberline was characterized and quantified under field conditions. Measurements of organic and inorganic CO sequestration with gas exchange and stock counting approaches were made in both rainfed control (approximately 12 average annual soil moisture) and summer irrigated plots (approximately 24 annual average soil moisture), providing the opportunity to separate the effects of atmospheric water demand from soil water stress on the atmospheric CO sequestration responses. Measurements yield an organic carbon sequestration (OCS) rate of approximately 550 g CO m yr, two-thirds in soil and one-third in biomass. In addition, measurements yield an inorganic carbon sequestration (ICS) rate of approximately 216 g CO…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSoil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics · Science and Climate Studies · Peatlands and Wetlands Ecology
