植树造林
温室气体
环境科学
温室效应
环境保护
农林复合经营
气候变化
全球变暖
地质学
海洋学
作者
Jianing Liang,Austin Himes,Courtney M. Siegert
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.125709
摘要
Afforestation is a natural climate solution and a key strategy to mitigate climate change. While tree planting primarily achieves this mitigation via above-ground carbon sequestration, soils also play a dual role as sources and sinks of greenhouse gases (GHG). Understanding afforestation impacts on soil GHG flux is essential for leveraging afforestation to combat global warming. In this research, we conducted a global meta-analysis of 157 studies to assess the effects of afforestation on soil GHG emissions across different prior land uses and to identify key emission drivers. Our results indicated that afforestation significantly reduced CO2 emissions in former grasslands and deforested land and decreased CH4 emissions across most prior land uses. However, soil N2O flux was mostly unaffected by afforestation. The type of forest planted also influenced soil GHG emissions. Hardwood planting reduced CH4 emissions, but no clear trends emerged for N2O emissions from either softwood or hardwood forests. Tree planting density had no significant effect on GHG fluxes. GHG responses to afforestation also changed over time and were influenced by environmental factors. CO2 emissions correlated positively with soil organic carbon, mean annual precipitation, C:N ratio, and soil temperature. N2O flux increased with soil NO3- and microbial nitrogen and decreased with soil organic carbon and moisture. Additionally, soil microbial biomass carbon and soil organic carbon were positively correlated with CH4 emissions. These findings highlight the importance of selecting tree species, site conditions, and environmental factors to optimize afforestation's GHG mitigation potential.
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