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  • Data for: Soil Nutrients Increase Long-term Soil Carbon Gains Threefold on Retired Farmland
  • Seabloom, Eric W; University of Minnesota, Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior
    Borer, Elizabeth T; University of Minnesota, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior
    Hobbie, Sarah E; University of Minnesota, Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior
    MacDougall, Andrew S; Dept. of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph
  • 2021-07-20
  • Seabloom, E.W., E.T. Borer, S.E. Hobbie, and A.S. MacDougall. 2021. Data for: Soil Nutrients Increase Long-term Soil Carbon Gains Threefold on Retired Farmland ver 1. Environmental Data Initiative. https://doi.org/DOI_PLACE_HOLDER (Accessed 2024-12-27).
  • These data report soil C for almost four decades following intensive agricultural soil disturbance along an experimentally imposed gradient in nitrogen (N) added annually in combination with other macro- and micro-nutrients. Data were collected at the Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve (CCESR), a U.S. Long Term Ecological Research (USLTER) site located in central Minnesota, USA. Soil % C accumulated over the course of the study in unfertilized control plots leading to a gain of 6.1 Mg C ha-1 in the top 20 cm of soil. Nutrient addition increased soil % C accumulation leading to a gain of 17.8 Mg C ha-1 in fertilized plots, nearly a threefold increase over the control plots. These results demonstrate that substantial increases in soil C in successional grasslands following agricultural abandonment occurs over decadal timescales, and that C gain is increased by high supply rates of soil nutrients. In addition, soil % C continued to increase for decades under elevated nutrient supply, suggesting that short-term nutrient-addition experiments underestimate the effects of soil nutrients on soil C accumulation.

  • N: 45.4      S: 45.4      E: -93.2      W: -93.2
  • edi.370.1  (Uploaded 2021-07-20)  
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  • DOI PLACE HOLDER
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