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Soil carbon stocks in wetlands of New Zealand and impact of land conversion since European settlement

Version 2 2024-06-13, 07:14
Version 1 2015-10-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 07:14 authored by A-GE Ausseil, H Jamali, BR Clarkson, NE Golubiewski
Freshwater wetlands provide a range of ecosystem services, one of which is climate regulation. They are known to contain large pools of carbon (C) that can be affected by land-use change. In New Zealand, only 10 % of the original freshwater wetlands remain due to conversion into agriculture. This study presents the first national estimation of C stocks in freshwater wetlands based on the compilation of soil carbon data from 126 sites across the country. We estimated C stocks for two soil sample types (mineral and organic) in different classes of wetlands (fen, bog, swamp, marsh, pakihi and ephemeral), and extrapolated C stocks to national level using GIS. Bogs had high C content and low bulk densities, while ephemeral wetlands were the reverse. A regression between bulk density and C content showed a high influence of the soil type. Average C densities (average ± standard error) were 1,348 ± 184 t C ha<sup>−1</sup> at full peat depth (average of 3.9 m) and 102 ± 5 t C ha<sup>−1</sup> (0.3 m depth) for organic soils, and 121 ± 24 t C ha<sup>−1</sup> (0.3 m depth) for mineral soils. At national level, C stocks were estimated at 11 ± 1 Mt (0.3 m depth) and 144 ± 17 Mt (full peat depth) in organic soils, and 23 ± 1 Mt (0.3 m depth) in mineral soils. Since European settlement, 146,000 ha of organic soils have been converted to agriculture, which could release between 0.5 and 2 Mt CO2 year<sup>−1</sup>, equivalent to 1–6 % of New Zealand’s total agricultural greenhouse gas emissions.

History

Related Materials

Location

Berlin, Germany

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Springer

Journal

Wetlands ecology and management

Volume

23

Pagination

947-961

ISSN

0923-4861

eISSN

1572-9834

Issue

5

Publisher

Springer