Soil carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes in permanent upslope pasture and downslope riparian buffers with varying vegetation
Background Riparian buffers are primarily implemented for their water quality functions in agroecosystems. Their location in the agricultural landscape allows them to intercept and process pollutants from immediately adjacent agricultural land. Vegetated riparian buffers recycle soil organic matter, which elevates soil carbon (C), which upon processing, processes and releases carbon dioxide (CO2). The elevated soil C and seasonally anoxic environments associated with riparian buffers promote denitrification and fermentation, further increasing soil CO2 production.
Aim Against this context, a replicated plot-scale experiment was established at North Wyke, UK, to measure the extent of soil CO2 emissions in permanent pasture served by grass, willow, and woodland riparian buffers, as well as a no-buffer control.
Methods Soil CO2 was measured using the static chamber technique in conjunction with soil and environmental variables between June 2018 and February 2019.
Results Cumulative soil CO2 fluxes were in the descending order: woodland riparian buffer; 11,927.8 ± 1987.9 kg CO2 ha–1 > no-buffer control; 11,101.3 ± 3700.4 kg CO2 ha–1 > grass riparian buffer; 10,826.4 ± 2551.8 kg CO2 ha–1 > upslope pasture; 10,554.6 ± 879.5 kg CO2 ha–1 > willow riparian buffer; 9294.9 ± 1549.2 5 kg CO2 ha–1. There was, however, no evidence of significant differences among all treatments of the current study.
Conclusions Despite the lack of significant differences, the results from our short-term study show that the woodland riparian buffer had relatively larger soil CO2 emissions than the remainder of the other riparian buffers and the upslope pasture it serves. Our short-term findings may be useful in developing soil CO2 mitigation strategies through careful selection of riparian buffer vegetation and may be useful in calibrating mechanistic models for simulating such emissions from similar agro-systems.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Gold |
| Keywords | Novel grass , Permanent pasture , Riparian buffers , Willow , Woodland |
| Project | The South African Department of Higher Education and Training (New Generation Gap of Academics Program), National Research Foundation-Thuthuka. Grant Number: 117964, Impacts of different vegetation in riparian buffer strips on hydrology and water quality, Researcher Links Travel Grant, S2N - Soil to Nutrition - Work package 2 (WP2) - Adaptive management systems for improved efficiency and nutritional quality, S2N - Soil to Nutrition - Work package 3 (WP3) - Sustainable intensification - optimisation at multiple scales |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 10:36 |
| Last Modified | 19 Dec 2025 14:56 |
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picture_as_pdf - Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science - 2023 - Dlamini - Soil carbon dioxide CO2 fluxes in permanent upslope.pdf
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