Soil carbon stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe: a meta-analysis

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Standard

Soil carbon stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe : a meta-analysis. / Bárcena, Teresa G; Kiær, Lars Pødenphant; Vesterdal, Lars; Stefánsdóttir, H.M.; Gundersen, Per; Sigurdsson, B.D.

In: Global Change Biology, Vol. 20, No. 8, 2014, p. 2393-2405.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bárcena, TG, Kiær, LP, Vesterdal, L, Stefánsdóttir, HM, Gundersen, P & Sigurdsson, BD 2014, 'Soil carbon stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe: a meta-analysis', Global Change Biology, vol. 20, no. 8, pp. 2393-2405. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12576

APA

Bárcena, T. G., Kiær, L. P., Vesterdal, L., Stefánsdóttir, H. M., Gundersen, P., & Sigurdsson, B. D. (2014). Soil carbon stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe: a meta-analysis. Global Change Biology, 20(8), 2393-2405. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12576

Vancouver

Bárcena TG, Kiær LP, Vesterdal L, Stefánsdóttir HM, Gundersen P, Sigurdsson BD. Soil carbon stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe: a meta-analysis. Global Change Biology. 2014;20(8):2393-2405. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12576

Author

Bárcena, Teresa G ; Kiær, Lars Pødenphant ; Vesterdal, Lars ; Stefánsdóttir, H.M. ; Gundersen, Per ; Sigurdsson, B.D. / Soil carbon stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe : a meta-analysis. In: Global Change Biology. 2014 ; Vol. 20, No. 8. pp. 2393-2405.

Bibtex

@article{56b2809d024346c19308ae85b5c724d7,
title = "Soil carbon stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe: a meta-analysis",
abstract = "Northern Europe supports large soil organic carbon (SOC) pools and has been subjected to high frequency of land-use changes during the past decades. However, this region has not been well represented in previous large-scale syntheses of land-use change effects on SOC, especially regarding effects of afforestation. Therefore, we conducted a meta-analysis of SOC stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe. Response ratios were calculated for forest floors and mineral soils (0–10 cm and 0–20/30 cm layers) based on paired control (former land use) and afforested plots. We analyzed the influence of forest age, former land-use, forest type, and soil textural class. Three major improvements were incorporated in the meta-analysis: analysis of major interaction groups, evaluation of the influence of nonindependence between samples according to study design, and mass correction. Former land use was a major factor contributing to changes in SOC after afforestation. In former croplands, SOC change differed between soil layers and was significantly positive (20%) in the 0–10 cm layer. Afforestation of former grasslands had a small negative (nonsignificant) effect indicating limited SOC change following this land-use change within the region. Forest floors enhanced the positive effects of afforestation on SOC, especially with conifers. Meta-estimates calculated for the periods <30 years and >30 years since afforestation revealed a shift from initial loss to later gain of SOC. The interaction group analysis indicated that meta-estimates in former land-use, forest type, and soil textural class alone were either offset or enhanced when confounding effects among variable classes were considered. Furthermore, effect sizes were slightly overestimated if sample dependence was not accounted for and if no mass correction was performed. We conclude that significant SOC sequestration in Northern Europe occurs after afforestation of croplands and not grasslands, and changes are small within a 30-year perspective.",
author = "B{\'a}rcena, {Teresa G} and Ki{\ae}r, {Lars P{\o}denphant} and Lars Vesterdal and H.M. Stef{\'a}nsd{\'o}ttir and Per Gundersen and B.D. Sigurdsson",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1111/gcb.12576",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "2393--2405",
journal = "Global Change Biology",
issn = "1354-1013",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Soil carbon stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe

T2 - a meta-analysis

AU - Bárcena, Teresa G

AU - Kiær, Lars Pødenphant

AU - Vesterdal, Lars

AU - Stefánsdóttir, H.M.

AU - Gundersen, Per

AU - Sigurdsson, B.D.

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Northern Europe supports large soil organic carbon (SOC) pools and has been subjected to high frequency of land-use changes during the past decades. However, this region has not been well represented in previous large-scale syntheses of land-use change effects on SOC, especially regarding effects of afforestation. Therefore, we conducted a meta-analysis of SOC stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe. Response ratios were calculated for forest floors and mineral soils (0–10 cm and 0–20/30 cm layers) based on paired control (former land use) and afforested plots. We analyzed the influence of forest age, former land-use, forest type, and soil textural class. Three major improvements were incorporated in the meta-analysis: analysis of major interaction groups, evaluation of the influence of nonindependence between samples according to study design, and mass correction. Former land use was a major factor contributing to changes in SOC after afforestation. In former croplands, SOC change differed between soil layers and was significantly positive (20%) in the 0–10 cm layer. Afforestation of former grasslands had a small negative (nonsignificant) effect indicating limited SOC change following this land-use change within the region. Forest floors enhanced the positive effects of afforestation on SOC, especially with conifers. Meta-estimates calculated for the periods <30 years and >30 years since afforestation revealed a shift from initial loss to later gain of SOC. The interaction group analysis indicated that meta-estimates in former land-use, forest type, and soil textural class alone were either offset or enhanced when confounding effects among variable classes were considered. Furthermore, effect sizes were slightly overestimated if sample dependence was not accounted for and if no mass correction was performed. We conclude that significant SOC sequestration in Northern Europe occurs after afforestation of croplands and not grasslands, and changes are small within a 30-year perspective.

AB - Northern Europe supports large soil organic carbon (SOC) pools and has been subjected to high frequency of land-use changes during the past decades. However, this region has not been well represented in previous large-scale syntheses of land-use change effects on SOC, especially regarding effects of afforestation. Therefore, we conducted a meta-analysis of SOC stock change following afforestation in Northern Europe. Response ratios were calculated for forest floors and mineral soils (0–10 cm and 0–20/30 cm layers) based on paired control (former land use) and afforested plots. We analyzed the influence of forest age, former land-use, forest type, and soil textural class. Three major improvements were incorporated in the meta-analysis: analysis of major interaction groups, evaluation of the influence of nonindependence between samples according to study design, and mass correction. Former land use was a major factor contributing to changes in SOC after afforestation. In former croplands, SOC change differed between soil layers and was significantly positive (20%) in the 0–10 cm layer. Afforestation of former grasslands had a small negative (nonsignificant) effect indicating limited SOC change following this land-use change within the region. Forest floors enhanced the positive effects of afforestation on SOC, especially with conifers. Meta-estimates calculated for the periods <30 years and >30 years since afforestation revealed a shift from initial loss to later gain of SOC. The interaction group analysis indicated that meta-estimates in former land-use, forest type, and soil textural class alone were either offset or enhanced when confounding effects among variable classes were considered. Furthermore, effect sizes were slightly overestimated if sample dependence was not accounted for and if no mass correction was performed. We conclude that significant SOC sequestration in Northern Europe occurs after afforestation of croplands and not grasslands, and changes are small within a 30-year perspective.

U2 - 10.1111/gcb.12576

DO - 10.1111/gcb.12576

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24634314

VL - 20

SP - 2393

EP - 2405

JO - Global Change Biology

JF - Global Change Biology

SN - 1354-1013

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 102758110