Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Impacts of soil erosion on organic carbon and nutrient dynamics in an alpine grassland soil
Author
Nie, X J
Zhao, T Q
Qiao, X N
Publisher
Soil Science and Plant Nutrition
Publication Year
2013
Body

The impact of soil erosion on the nutrient dynamics in alpine grassland soils is still an essential problem. Selecting a grass-covered hillslope in eastern Tibet Plateau, the cesium-137 (137Cs) technique was used to determine the impacts of soil erosion on soil organic carbon (SOC), total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), and total potassium (TK). The 137Cs data revealed that there were distinct soil redistribution patterns in different hillslope positions because of the influences of slope runoff, plant coverage and grazing activity. For the upper slope, soil erosion first decreased downward, followed by soil deposition in its lower part. In contrast, for middle and toe slopes, there was an increasing soil erosion along a downslope transect. Across the lower slope, soil erosion showed an irregular variation. Influenced by the selective transport of water erosion, SOC, TN and TP storage decreased with increasing soil erosion in upper, middle and toe slopes. In contrast, SOC, TN and TP storage varied little with soil erosion in the lower slope. On the whole hillslope, TK storage also varied little with soil erosion due to the large amount of potassium elements derived from soil parent materials. Particularly noteworthy was the greatest storage of SOC, TN and TP in the lower slope where most obvious net soil erosion occurred, which is closely related to the humus accumulation combined with gravel separation as well as weathering and pedogenesis of parent rocks induced by soil freeze-thaw.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
59
Journal Number
4
Journal Pages
660-668
Journal Name
Soil Science and Plant Nutrition
Keywords
soils
erosion
organic carbon
grasslands
soil nutirents
ecosystem ecology
nutrient dynamics
Tibet