99-6 A Local, Regional and Global Perspective of C Storage in Urban Soils.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Urban and Anthropogenic Soils
See more from this Session: Symposium--Carbon Storage and Dynamics in Urban Soils

Monday, November 16, 2015: 3:25 PM
Hilton Minneapolis, Marquette Ballroom I

Richard V. Pouyat, 1601 North Kent Street, 4th FL, USDA Forest Service (FS), Arlington, VA, Ian Yesilonis, USDA - Forest Service, Baltimore, MD, Yujuan Chen, Forestry Department, Food and Agriculture Organization, United Nations, Rome, Italy and Susan D. Day, 310 Cheatham Hall, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA
Abstract:
Land use change (LUC) has a significant impact on both above- and below-ground carbon (C) stocks; however, little is known about the net effects of urban LUC on the C cycle and climate system. Moreover, as climate change becomes an increasingly pressing concern, there is growing evidence that urban policy and management decisions can have significant regional impacts on C dynamics. Soil organic carbon (SOC) varies significantly across ecoregions at global and continental scales due to differential sensitivity of primary production, substrate quality, and organic matter decay to changes in temperature and soil moisture. These factors are highly modified by urban LUC due to vegetation removal, soil relocation and disruption, pollution, urban heat island effects, and increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations. As a result, on a global scale urban LUC differentially affects the C cycle from ecoregion to ecoregion.

For urban ecosystems, the data collected thus far suggests urbanization can lead to both an increase and decrease in soil C pools and fluxes, depending on the native ecosystem being impacted by urban development. For example, in drier climates, urban landscapes accumulate higher C densities than the native ecosystems they replaced. Results suggest also that soil C storage in urban ecosystems is highly variable with very high (> 20.0) and low (< 2.0) C densities (kg m-2 to a 1 m depth) present in the landscape at any one time.  Moreover, similar to non-urban soils, total SOC densities are consistently 2-fold greater than aboveground stocks. For those soils with low SOC densities, there is potential to increase C sequestration through management, but specific urban related management practices need to be evaluated. In addition, urban LUC is a human-driven process and thus can be modified or adjusted to reduce its impacts on the C cycle. For example, policies that influence development patterns, population density, management practices, and other human factors can greatly ameliorate the impact of urban LUC on the C cycle. However, even with the recent and rapid expansion of newly acquired data, the net effects of urban LUC on C stocks and fluxes have not been comprehensively addressed. Furthermore, how sensitive these changes are to urban planning, policy decisions, and site management needs to be explored.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Urban and Anthropogenic Soils
See more from this Session: Symposium--Carbon Storage and Dynamics in Urban Soils

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