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ESTIMATING TURNOVER OF SOIL ORGANIC CARBON FRACTIONS BASED ON RADIOCARBON MEASUREMENTS

Sander Bruun, Johan Six, Lars S Jensen, Keith Paustian

Abstract


In this paper, we examine 3 different models used to estimate turnover of soil organic carbon (SOC) fractions

using radiocarbon measurements: one conventional carbon dating model and two bomb 14C models. One of the bomb 14C

models uses an atmospheric 14C record for the period 22,050 BC to AD 2003 and is solved by numerical methods, while the

other assumes a constant 14C content of the atmosphere and is solved analytically. The estimates of SOC turnover obtained

by the conventional 14C dating model differed substantially from those obtained by the bomb 14C models, which we attribute

to the simplifying assumption of the conventional 14C model that the whole SOC fraction is of the same age. The assumptions

underlying the bomb 14C models are more applicable to SOC fractions; therefore, the calculated turnover times are considered

to be more reliable. We used Monte Carlo simulations to estimate the uncertainties of the turnover times calculated with the

numerically solved 14C model, accounting not only for measurement errors but also for uncertainties introduced from

assumptions of constant input and uncertainties in the 14C content of the CO2 assimilated by plants. The resulting uncertainties

depend on systematic deviations in the atmospheric 14C record for SOC fractions with a fast turnover. Therefore, the use of

the bomb 14C models can be problematic when SOC fractions with a fast turnover are analyzed, whereas the relative

uncertainty of the turnover estimates turned out to be smaller than 30% when the turnover time of the SOC fractions analyzed

was longer than 30 yr, and smaller than 15% when the turnover time was longer than 100 yr.

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