Open Access
Quantitative evaluation of carbon dioxide emissions from the subsoils of volcanic and non-volcanic ash soils in temperate forest ecosystems
Yukiko Abe
1
,
Masataka Nakayama
1, 2
,
Mariko Atarashi-Andoh
1
,
Takeshi Tange
3
,
Haruo Sawada
4
,
Naishen Liang
5
,
Jun Koarashi
1
3
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2025-03-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 2.067
CiteScore: 12.9
Impact factor: 6.6
ISSN: 00167061, 18726259
Abstract
Subsoils (typically below a depth of 30 cm) contain more than half of global soil carbon (C) as soil organic C (SOC). However, the extent to which subsoil SOC contributes to the global C cycle and the factors that control it are unclear because quantitative evaluation of carbon dioxide (CO2) emission from subsoils through direct observations is limited. This study aimed to quantify CO2 emission from subsoils and determine factors that control CO2 emission, focusing on the decomposability of soil organic matter (SOM) and the characteristics of the mineral–SOM association in soils. Therefore, a laboratory incubation experiment was conducted using surface soils (0–10 cm and 10–25 cm depth) and subsoils (30–45 cm and 45–60 cm depth) collected from four Japanese forest sites with two different soil types (volcanic ash and non-volcanic ash soils). The CO2 emission from the subsoils was found to be responsible for 6 %–23 % of total CO2 emission from the upper 60-cm mineral soil across all sites. Radiocarbon signatures of CO2 released from the subsoils indicated the decomposition of decades-old SOM in the subsoils. The correlations between CO2 emission rate and soil factors across both soil types suggested that the CO2 emission from the subsoils is mainly controlled by the amounts of SOC easily available to soil microbes and microbial biomass C, not by the amounts of reactive minerals. Given the potential active participation of subsoils in terrestrial C cycling, most of the current soil C models that ignore subsoil C cycling are likely to underestimate the response of soil C to future climate change. The quantitative and mechanistic understanding of C cycling through a huge subsoil C pool is critical to accurately evaluating the role of soil C in the global C balance.
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Abe Y. et al. Quantitative evaluation of carbon dioxide emissions from the subsoils of volcanic and non-volcanic ash soils in temperate forest ecosystems // Geoderma. 2025. Vol. 455. p. 117221.
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Abe Y., Nakayama M., Atarashi-Andoh M., Tange T., Sawada H., Liang N., Koarashi J. Quantitative evaluation of carbon dioxide emissions from the subsoils of volcanic and non-volcanic ash soils in temperate forest ecosystems // Geoderma. 2025. Vol. 455. p. 117221.
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.geoderma.2025.117221
UR - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S001670612500059X
TI - Quantitative evaluation of carbon dioxide emissions from the subsoils of volcanic and non-volcanic ash soils in temperate forest ecosystems
T2 - Geoderma
AU - Abe, Yukiko
AU - Nakayama, Masataka
AU - Atarashi-Andoh, Mariko
AU - Tange, Takeshi
AU - Sawada, Haruo
AU - Liang, Naishen
AU - Koarashi, Jun
PY - 2025
DA - 2025/03/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 117221
VL - 455
SN - 0016-7061
SN - 1872-6259
ER -
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@article{2025_Abe,
author = {Yukiko Abe and Masataka Nakayama and Mariko Atarashi-Andoh and Takeshi Tange and Haruo Sawada and Naishen Liang and Jun Koarashi},
title = {Quantitative evaluation of carbon dioxide emissions from the subsoils of volcanic and non-volcanic ash soils in temperate forest ecosystems},
journal = {Geoderma},
year = {2025},
volume = {455},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {mar},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S001670612500059X},
pages = {117221},
doi = {10.1016/j.geoderma.2025.117221}
}