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Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada Stephanie Grand and Les M. Lavkulich Soil Water Air Laboratory University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada [email protected] Faculty of Land and Food Systems Institute for Resources and the Environment

Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

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Faculty of Land and Food Systems Institute for Resources and the Environment. Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada. Stephanie Grand and Les M. Lavkulich Soil Water Air Laboratory University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British

Columbia, Canada

Stephanie Grand and Les M. LavkulichSoil Water Air Laboratory

University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, [email protected]

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 2: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Objective

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Document the effects of logging on:

Organic matter

Reactive mineral fractions

Available and labile nutrient pools

Page 3: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Measurements

• Soil organic matter • Total C and N• Exchangeable cations• Reactive mineral fraction

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 4: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

The field sites

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 5: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Roberts Creek study forest

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Control plots = mature (140 years) forest

Cleared plots = clear-cut 1 to 5 years prior to sampling

Regenerating plots = clear-cut 8 to 15 years prior to sampling

Page 6: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 7: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Soil type

Albic Gleyic Podzol (Humo-ferric Podzol / Aquentic Haplorthod)

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 8: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

C stock: control site

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 9: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Cleared plots

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 10: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Regenerating plots

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 11: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Indicators of bulk OM composition

C:N C:SOM CECe:C

Control 24 50% 0.9

Cleared 23 51% 0.9

Regenerating 21 41% 1.3

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 12: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

-3 0 3 6

-2

0

2control

cleared

regenerating

PC1 (OM content)

PC3

(OM

imm

atur

ity)

Principle component analysis

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 13: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Short-range order mineral phases

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

0 1

6

20

73

Ae

38

713

24

19

Bf

41

68

22

23

BCC

% ITM

% FH

% Feoxi

% clayOM

% clay

Page 14: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Short-range order phases

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

g/kg ITM (SRO Al phase)

FH (SRO Fe phase)

Control 23.2 3.6

Cleared 29.1 4.8

Regenerating 15.9 2.8

Page 15: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Future work

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

• Rate of precipitation and dissolution of short-range order phases

• Rate of formation of organo-mineral complexes

Page 16: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Conclusion• Subsoil C is important

60% of the soil C found below 20 cm depthDeep C pool responsible for overall C trend

• Clear-cutting causes increase in mineral soil C• Short-lived increase

suggesting that new C is not stabilized or that older C is mineralized

• Indication that logging impacts podzolization processReactive mineral phases dynamicsC stabilization potential

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Page 17: Effects of logging on soil organic carbon in the Coast Mountains of British Columbia, Canada

Acknowledgements• PhD thesis advisory committee

Dr. L. Lavkulich, Dr. H. Schreier, Dr. R. Hudson

• Lab technicians Carol Dyck and Keren Fergusson

• Field assistants Peter Shanahan, Marina Romeo and Bryan Forrest

Faculty of Land and Food SystemsInstitute for Resources and the Environment

Special thanks to the French Society for Soil Study (AFES) for financial support