Interactions among hydro-aeolian processes and micro-geomorphology stimulate hot spots of sediment carbon source and sink within a coppice dune system

PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY(2022)

Cited 2|Views11
No score
Abstract
We evaluated the impacts of the interactions among hydro-aeolian processes and micro-geomorphology on mechanisms controlling the sediment carbon source and sink within a coppice dune. The sediment sampling process was performed within different positions of each dune. Sediment grain size distribution, geometric mean diameter, mean weight diameter, labile SOC, CO2 flux, and C mineralization ratio were measured. The finest sediments were observed on the dune edge. The labile SOC and CO2 flux rate showed an increasing trend in the edge, windward, and top positions. However, the C mineralization ratio decreased only in the dune edge. A significant increase of clay fractions at the dune edge can result from the horizontal sediment transport by runoff from the interdune area to the dune. The SOC could bond with clay fractions to contribute toward the formation of soil aggregation, causing less vulnerability of SOC to microbial respiration. A significant increase of sand fractions, transported by the aeolian process, on the top and windward positions could not protect SOC against decomposition. The interactions among hydro-aeolian processes and micro-geomorphology could encourage the hot spots of sediment carbon reservoirs within the dryland landforms that have a significant proportion in the exchange of carbon to the atmosphere.
More
Translated text
Key words
Hydrological process, wind erosion, sediment carbon, CO2 reservoir
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined