Soils of agroecosystems are depleted of their SOC reserves in comparison with those of natural ecosystems. The magnitude of depletion depends on land use and the type and severity of degradation. Soils prone to accelerated erosion can be strongly depleted of their SOC reserves, especially those in the surface layer. Therefore, conservation through restorative land use and adoption of recommended management practices to create a positive soil-ecosystem carbon budget can increase carbon stock and soil health.
This volume of Advances in Soil Sciences aims to accomplish the following:
- Present impacts of land use and soil management on SOC dynamics
- Discuss effects of SOC levels on agronomic productivity and use efficiency of inputs
- Detail potential of soil management on the rate and cumulative amount of carbon sequestration in relation to land use and soil/crop management
- Deliberate the cause-effect relationship between SOC content and provisioning of some ecosystem services
- Relate soil organic carbon stock to soil properties and processes
- Establish the relationship between soil organic carbon stock with land and climate
- Identify controls of making soil organic carbon stock as a source or sink of CO2
- Connect soil organic carbon and carbon sequestration for climate mitigation and adaptation
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