Poster's note : soil carbon has gotten a little attention on this list
previously. This paper paves the way to a more complete understand of the
geoengineering potential of soil manipulation. Should this be called Soil
Carbon Capture or Soil Carbon Enhancement?

http://m.phys.org/news/2014-11-biologists-collaborate-refine-climate-tools.html

New model includes critical plant-soil interaction processes in climate
assessments

Projections for net carbon loss due to root-soil interactions were
strongest in temperate North America, Western Europe, Southeast Asia and
Southern Africa.

A new climate change modeling tool developed by scientists at Indiana
University, Princeton University and the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration finds that carbon dioxide removal from the
atmosphere owing to greater plant growth from rising CO2 levels will be
partially offset by changes in the activity of soil microbes that derive
their energy from plant root growth.

Soils hold more carbon than all of the earth's plant biomass and atmosphere
combined. The new work published by Benjamin N. Sulman, a postdoctoral
researcher in the lab of co-author and IU Department of Biology associate
professor Richard P. Phillips, identifies the highly active community of
chemicals and organisms in the rhizosphere, or the soil that surrounds
roots, as the driver behind increased emissions.

"The deposition of compounds such as sugars and organic acids from living
roots can increase the activity of bacteria and fungi, and it's this
increase in activity that accelerates the decomposition of carbon in the
soil, leading to higher CO2 emissions," Sulman said. "On the other hand,
this increased activity can transform carbon compounds into forms more
easily locked onto soil particles, allowing them to stay in the soil for
longer periods of time."

Global simulations conducted by the team found that microbial responses to
enhanced root activity under rising CO2, while depending on plant species,
climate and soil mineralogy, led to a loss of global soil carbon stocks
that counteracted the additional carbon storage resulting from increased
plant growth in many regions of the world. The strongest of these effects
were found in temperate North America, Western Europe, Southeast Asia and
Southern Africa, while gains in soil carbon capture were greatest in boreal
North America, Siberia and tropical South America.

Prior to the new research published today in Nature Climate Change,
computer models used to simulate future climate change generally had not
been able to simulate interactions between plant growth and microbial
decomposition rates. The new modeling tool—Carbon, Organisms, Rhizosphere
and Protection in the Soil Environment, or CORPSE—represents a major
advance in the ability of scientists to simulate the global carbon cycle.

The model has already been integrated into the next generation of the
global land model used for climate simulations by the NOAA Geophysical
Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, a major national climate modeling center."

This model will allow critical plant-soil interaction processes to be
included in future climate assessments," Phillips said. "To not consider
how microbes influence soil carbon in offsetting ways, promoting losses
through enhanced decomposition but gains by protecting soil carbon, would
lead to overestimates or underestimates of the role soils play in
influencing global climate."

Simulations for the experiments were projected over a 30-year period and
found that root-microbe interactions stimulated protection of carbon in
soils where cold temperatures limited decomposition (high altitudes), and
in regions like tropical South America where high soil clay content allowed
carbon compounds to be locked onto mineral particles, protecting them from
microbial decomposition. Rapid decomposition facilitated by warm
temperatures and abundant moisture in these same tropical regions slowed
the accumulation of organic matter that was not protected from microbial
decomposers.

Model simulations can always be improved by testing predictions against
field data collected from different ecosystems, and Sulman and Phillips are
doing just that: investigating how roots influence soil decomposition and
protected forms of carbon in forests that vary in the composition of tree
and microbial communities.

"These experiments will enable us to further test and refine the underlying
processes in the CORPSE model and should lead to improved predictions of
the role of plant-soil interactions in global climate change," Sulman
said."Microbe-driven turnover offsets mineral-mediated storage of soil
carbon under elevated CO2" appeared online today in Nature Climate Change.

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