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Annual grass invasions and wildfire deplete ecosystem carbon storage by >50% to resistant base levels

November 11, 2024

Ecological disturbance can affect carbon storage and stability and is a key consideration for managing lands to preserve or increase ecosystem carbon to ameliorate the global greenhouse gas problem. Dryland soils are massive carbon reservoirs that are increasingly impacted by species invasions and altered fire regimes, including the exotic-grass-fire cycle in the extensive sagebrush steppe of North America. Direct measurement of total carbon in 1174 samples from landscapes of this region that differed in invasion and wildfire history revealed that their impacts depleted soil carbon by 42–49%, primarily in deep horizons, which could amount to 17.1–20.0 Tg carbon lost across the ~400,000 ha affected annually. Disturbance effects on soil carbon stocks were not synergistic, suggesting that soil carbon was lowered to a floor—i.e. a resistant base-level—beneath which further loss was unlikely. Restoration and maintenance of resilient dryland shrublands/rangelands could stabilize soil carbon at magnitudes relevant to the global carbon cycle.

Publication Year 2024
Title Annual grass invasions and wildfire deplete ecosystem carbon storage by >50% to resistant base levels
DOI 10.1038/s43247-024-01795-9
Authors Toby Maxwell, Harold Quicke, Samuel Price, Matthew J. Germino
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Nature Communications, Earth & Environment
Index ID 70260851
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center
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