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Quantifying global soil carbon losses in response to warming.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Crowther, TW; Todd-Brown, KEO; Rowe, CW; Wieder, WR; Carey, JC; Machmuller, MB; Snoek, BL; Fang, S; Zhou, G; Allison, SD; Blair, JM; Reich, PB ...
Published in: Nature
November 2016

The majority of the Earth's terrestrial carbon is stored in the soil. If anthropogenic warming stimulates the loss of this carbon to the atmosphere, it could drive further planetary warming. Despite evidence that warming enhances carbon fluxes to and from the soil, the net global balance between these responses remains uncertain. Here we present a comprehensive analysis of warming-induced changes in soil carbon stocks by assembling data from 49 field experiments located across North America, Europe and Asia. We find that the effects of warming are contingent on the size of the initial soil carbon stock, with considerable losses occurring in high-latitude areas. By extrapolating this empirical relationship to the global scale, we provide estimates of soil carbon sensitivity to warming that may help to constrain Earth system model projections. Our empirical relationship suggests that global soil carbon stocks in the upper soil horizons will fall by 30 ± 30 petagrams of carbon to 203 ± 161 petagrams of carbon under one degree of warming, depending on the rate at which the effects of warming are realized. Under the conservative assumption that the response of soil carbon to warming occurs within a year, a business-as-usual climate scenario would drive the loss of 55 ± 50 petagrams of carbon from the upper soil horizons by 2050. This value is around 12-17 per cent of the expected anthropogenic emissions over this period. Despite the considerable uncertainty in our estimates, the direction of the global soil carbon response is consistent across all scenarios. This provides strong empirical support for the idea that rising temperatures will stimulate the net loss of soil carbon to the atmosphere, driving a positive land carbon-climate feedback that could accelerate climate change.

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Published In

Nature

DOI

EISSN

1476-4687

ISSN

0028-0836

Publication Date

November 2016

Volume

540

Issue

7631

Start / End Page

104 / 108

Related Subject Headings

  • Temperature
  • Soil
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Models, Statistical
  • Global Warming
  • Geography
  • General Science & Technology
  • Feedback
  • Ecosystem
  • Databases, Factual
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Crowther, T. W., Todd-Brown, K. E. O., Rowe, C. W., Wieder, W. R., Carey, J. C., Machmuller, M. B., … Bradford, M. A. (2016). Quantifying global soil carbon losses in response to warming. Nature, 540(7631), 104–108. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature20150
Crowther, T. W., K. E. O. Todd-Brown, C. W. Rowe, W. R. Wieder, J. C. Carey, M. B. Machmuller, B. L. Snoek, et al. “Quantifying global soil carbon losses in response to warming.Nature 540, no. 7631 (November 2016): 104–8. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature20150.
Crowther TW, Todd-Brown KEO, Rowe CW, Wieder WR, Carey JC, Machmuller MB, et al. Quantifying global soil carbon losses in response to warming. Nature. 2016 Nov;540(7631):104–8.
Crowther, T. W., et al. “Quantifying global soil carbon losses in response to warming.Nature, vol. 540, no. 7631, Nov. 2016, pp. 104–08. Epmc, doi:10.1038/nature20150.
Crowther TW, Todd-Brown KEO, Rowe CW, Wieder WR, Carey JC, Machmuller MB, Snoek BL, Fang S, Zhou G, Allison SD, Blair JM, Bridgham SD, Burton AJ, Carrillo Y, Reich PB, Clark JS, Classen AT, Dijkstra FA, Elberling B, Emmett BA, Estiarte M, Frey SD, Guo J, Harte J, Jiang L, Johnson BR, Kröel-Dulay G, Larsen KS, Laudon H, Lavallee JM, Luo Y, Lupascu M, Ma LN, Marhan S, Michelsen A, Mohan J, Niu S, Pendall E, Peñuelas J, Pfeifer-Meister L, Poll C, Reinsch S, Reynolds LL, Schmidt IK, Sistla S, Sokol NW, Templer PH, Treseder KK, Welker JM, Bradford MA. Quantifying global soil carbon losses in response to warming. Nature. 2016 Nov;540(7631):104–108.
Journal cover image

Published In

Nature

DOI

EISSN

1476-4687

ISSN

0028-0836

Publication Date

November 2016

Volume

540

Issue

7631

Start / End Page

104 / 108

Related Subject Headings

  • Temperature
  • Soil
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Models, Statistical
  • Global Warming
  • Geography
  • General Science & Technology
  • Feedback
  • Ecosystem
  • Databases, Factual