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Impact of geomorphic disturbance on spatial variability of soil CO 2 flux within a depositional landform
Author(s) -
Mohseni Neda,
Mohseni Amir,
Karimi Alireza,
Shabani Farzin
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
land degradation and development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.403
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1099-145X
pISSN - 1085-3278
DOI - 10.1002/ldr.3375
Subject(s) - soil water , landform , flux (metallurgy) , environmental science , soil science , soil carbon , alluvial fan , arid , hydrology (agriculture) , geology , geomorphology , chemistry , geotechnical engineering , organic chemistry , structural basin , paleontology
Landform structure‐dependent erosive soil processes impact on the physical, chemical, and biological properties of arid and semiarid areas soils through the redeposition of erosional soils and, consequently, play a role in changes to the global carbon cycle. Understanding the biophysical mechanisms that influence the balance of soil C flux is important for predicting the responses of dryland soilscapes to many forms of environmental change. This study was done along an upper‐to‐lower alluvial fan gradient, where debris flows, representing one of the most common erosive processes of dryland soils, cause local‐scale changes in soil biotic–abiotic patterns. In this empirically founded study, we assessed (a) the variations in soil CO 2 flux and some related physiochemical variables such as soil organic–inorganic C, soil C storage, exchangeable cations, pH, electrical conductivity, and volumetric water content and (b) whether these variations in soil CO 2 flux and its association with the above‐mentioned soil factors remained constant at three different positions in altitude along the slope of the alluvial fan. Our findings indicated significant differences according to slope position in terms of the flux rate of soil CO 2 and associated physiochemical properties. The application of multiple regression demonstrated that the higher soil CO 2 flux rates in the upper and middle fan positions are significantly positively correlated with organic C content. Despite the development of biological crusts on the lower fan sediments, they exhibited the lowest rate of soil CO 2 flux. Further, low CO 2 flux in the lower fan soils was found to be significantly negatively related to pH and inorganic C. This anomaly may be attributed to the alkalinity of the environment formed by the deposition of fine particle sediments on the lower fan position and the fact that CO 2 generated by the respiration of mosses may favor the exchange of organic C to carbonate production. Our findings underline the paradoxical impacts of debris flow disturbances on soil C dynamics. This erosive soil disturbance, together with the asymmetric resource redistribution and subsequent variations in the functioning of adjacent alluvial fan positions, can simultaneously provide ‘hot spots’ of reservoir and flux of soil C within different positions of a depositional landform.