Pedosphere 20(1): 80--89, 2010
ISSN 1002-0160/CN 32-1315/P
©2010 Soil Science Society of China
Published by Elsevier B.V. and Science Press
Spatial variability of soil organic carbon under maize monoculture in the Song-Nen Plain, Northeast China
WANG Zong-Ming, ZHANG Bai, SONG Kai-Shan, LIU Dian-Wei and REN Chun-Ying
Northeast Institute of Geography and Agricultural Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun 130012 (China)
ABSTRACT
      Soil organic carbon (SOC) and its relationship with landscape attributes are important for evaluating current regional, continental, and global carbon stores. Data of SOC in surface soils (0-20 cm) of four main soils, Cambisol, Arenosol, Phaeozem, and Chernozem, were collected at 451 locations in Nongan County under maize monoculture in the Song-Nen Plain, Northeast China. The spatial characteristics of soil organic carbon were studied, using geographic information systems (GIS) and geostatistics. Effects of other soil physical and chemical properties, elevation, slope, and soil type on SOC were explored. SOC concentrations followed a normal distribution, with an arithmetic mean of 14.91 g kg-1. The experimental variogram of SOC was fitted with a spherical model. There were significant correlations between soil organic carbon and bulk density (r = -0.374**), pH (r = 0.549**), total nitrogen (r = 0.781**), extractable phosphorus (r = -0.109*), exchangeable potassium (r = 0.565**), and cation exchange capacity (r = 0.313**). Generally, lower SOC concentrations were significantly associated with high elevation (r = -0.429**). Soil organic carbon was significantly negatively correlated with slope gradient (r = -0.195**). Samples of the Cambisol statistically had the highest SOC concentrations, and samples of the Arenosol had the lowest SOC value.
Key Words:  geostatistics, slope, soil bulk density, spatial distribution
Citation: Wang, Z. M., Zhang, B., Song, K. S., Liu, D. W. and Ren, C. Y. 2010. Spatial variability of soil organic carbon under maize monoculture in the Song-Nen Plain, Northeast China. Pedosphere. 20(1): 80-89.
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