Geomorphic evolution of soil texture and organic matter in eroding landscapes

Citation
Na. Rosenbloom et al., Geomorphic evolution of soil texture and organic matter in eroding landscapes, GLOBAL BIOG, 15(2), 2001, pp. 365-381
Citations number
53
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
ISSN journal
08866236 → ACNP
Volume
15
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
365 - 381
Database
ISI
SICI code
0886-6236(200106)15:2<365:GEOSTA>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
Geomorphic erosion on hillslopes creates a distribution of soil properties within the landscape that influences ecosystem, erosional, and hydrological processes. These soil properties typically reflect topography and define a template for plant productivity and consequent soil carbon accumulation. E rosion also redistributes soil carbon and, by burying or excavating carbon, changes turnover time and may figure prominently in the global carbon budg et [Stallard, 1998]. In this paper, we present the Changing Relief and Evol ving Ecosystems Project (CREEP), a theoretical, process-response model that focuses on the redistribution of soil texture and soil carbon along a hill slope in response to geomorphic transport processes. The CREEP model simula tes long-term ecological and geomorphic landscape evolution by simulating g eneral soil, vegetation, and hillslope transport relationships. In particul ar, the model allows for the removal and downslope transport of soil carbon , as well as for the burial and decomposition of carbon in the accumulation zone. CREEP model results suggest that sandy soils are more likely to diff erentiate downslope with respect to soil texture than are more clay-rich so ils and that this redistribution will lead to disproportionately broad area s of predominantly coarse-grained particles on upper slopes. Gridded biogeo chemical models, which may otherwise overlook landscape heterogeneity, may use CREEP estimates of the areal distribution of soil texture as a basis fo r parametrically capturing trace gas fluxes nonlinearly related to soil tex ture.