Carbon accumulation in Icelandic desert Andosols during early stages of restoration

Carbon accumulation in soils is an important method to offset the release of carbon based GHG into the atmosphere. We investigated carbon accumulation during early stages of ecological restoration of a desertified area in Iceland. The study site, a part of a larger experimental area, consisted of 24...

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Main Authors: Arnalds, Olafur, Orradottir, Berglind, Aradottir, Asa L.
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:6378
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author Arnalds, Olafur
Orradottir, Berglind
Aradottir, Asa L.
author_facet Arnalds, Olafur
Orradottir, Berglind
Aradottir, Asa L.
author_sort Arnalds, Olafur
collection United Nations University Tokyo: UNU Collections
description Carbon accumulation in soils is an important method to offset the release of carbon based GHG into the atmosphere. We investigated carbon accumulation during early stages of ecological restoration of a desertified area in Iceland. The study site, a part of a larger experimental area, consisted of 24 1 ha experimental plots with nine different restoration treatments and untreated control, all replicated 2–3times. The barren desert soils were sandy with unstable surface conditions subjected to intense cryoturbation and wind erosion. Initial carbon stocks in soils of eroded, untreated areas were 0.1–0.3 kg m− 2, largely consisting of inert metal–humus and/or clay–humus complex characteristic of Andosols. Carbon content in the 5 cm surface layer increased from < 0.3% up to > 0.7% in some treated plots. Annual carbon accumulation of 0.04–0.063 kg C m− 2 yr− 1 was observed over the first seven years after initiation of restoration efforts, highest in treatments seeded with grasses and fertilized but no accumulation was observed in untreated controls. Carbon accumulation rate of > 0.05 kg C m− 2 yr− 1 can potentially be maintained over > 100 yr due to the nature of Andosols and a steady burial by an influx of eolian materials. There are large areas of desertified surfaces in Iceland (thousands of km2), many of which are undergoing restoration treatments. Restoration efforts in Iceland can play a significant role in sequestering carbon in ecosystems to balance national greenhouse gas emissions as well as restoring biodiversity and important ecosystem services.
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
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spelling ftunitednatuni:oai:collections.unu.edu:UNU:6378 2025-03-23T15:38:11+00:00 Carbon accumulation in Icelandic desert Andosols during early stages of restoration Arnalds, Olafur Orradottir, Berglind Aradottir, Asa L. 2013-01-01 http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:6378 unknown Elsevier http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:6378 Carbon Carbon sequestration Andosols Revegetation Iceland Allophane 2013 ftunitednatuni 2025-02-27T08:52:34Z Carbon accumulation in soils is an important method to offset the release of carbon based GHG into the atmosphere. We investigated carbon accumulation during early stages of ecological restoration of a desertified area in Iceland. The study site, a part of a larger experimental area, consisted of 24 1 ha experimental plots with nine different restoration treatments and untreated control, all replicated 2–3times. The barren desert soils were sandy with unstable surface conditions subjected to intense cryoturbation and wind erosion. Initial carbon stocks in soils of eroded, untreated areas were 0.1–0.3 kg m− 2, largely consisting of inert metal–humus and/or clay–humus complex characteristic of Andosols. Carbon content in the 5 cm surface layer increased from < 0.3% up to > 0.7% in some treated plots. Annual carbon accumulation of 0.04–0.063 kg C m− 2 yr− 1 was observed over the first seven years after initiation of restoration efforts, highest in treatments seeded with grasses and fertilized but no accumulation was observed in untreated controls. Carbon accumulation rate of > 0.05 kg C m− 2 yr− 1 can potentially be maintained over > 100 yr due to the nature of Andosols and a steady burial by an influx of eolian materials. There are large areas of desertified surfaces in Iceland (thousands of km2), many of which are undergoing restoration treatments. Restoration efforts in Iceland can play a significant role in sequestering carbon in ecosystems to balance national greenhouse gas emissions as well as restoring biodiversity and important ecosystem services. Other/Unknown Material Iceland United Nations University Tokyo: UNU Collections
spellingShingle Carbon
Carbon sequestration
Andosols
Revegetation
Iceland
Allophane
Arnalds, Olafur
Orradottir, Berglind
Aradottir, Asa L.
Carbon accumulation in Icelandic desert Andosols during early stages of restoration
title Carbon accumulation in Icelandic desert Andosols during early stages of restoration
title_full Carbon accumulation in Icelandic desert Andosols during early stages of restoration
title_fullStr Carbon accumulation in Icelandic desert Andosols during early stages of restoration
title_full_unstemmed Carbon accumulation in Icelandic desert Andosols during early stages of restoration
title_short Carbon accumulation in Icelandic desert Andosols during early stages of restoration
title_sort carbon accumulation in icelandic desert andosols during early stages of restoration
topic Carbon
Carbon sequestration
Andosols
Revegetation
Iceland
Allophane
topic_facet Carbon
Carbon sequestration
Andosols
Revegetation
Iceland
Allophane
url http://collections.unu.edu/view/UNU:6378