EGU22-6813
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-6813
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Global distribution and climatological temperature sensitivity of soil organic matter fractions differ between observations and models 

Katerina Georgiou1, William R. Wieder2, Rose Z. Abramoff3, Charles D. Koven4, William J. Riley4, Anders Ahlström5, Nicholas J. Bouskill4, Melannie Hartman6, Adam Pellegrini7, Derek Pierson8, Benjamin Sulman3, Eric Slessarev1, Qing Zhu4, Jennifer Pett-Ridge1, and Robert B. Jackson9
Katerina Georgiou et al.
  • 1Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA
  • 2National Center for Atmospheric Research, USA
  • 3Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
  • 4Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA
  • 5Lund University, Sweden
  • 6Colorado State University, USA
  • 7University of Cambridge, UK
  • 8Idaho State University, USA
  • 9Stanford University, USA

Soils contain the largest actively-cycling terrestrial carbon pool, which is itself composed of chemically heterogeneous and measurable pools that vary in their persistence. Fundamental uncertainties in terrestrial carbon-climate feedbacks still depend on the timing, sign, and magnitude of the response of soil carbon, and its underlying pools, to environmental change. However, model comparisons typically focus on benchmarking only bulk soil carbon stocks and climatological temperature sensitivities. Underlying microbial and mineral-associated pools, and their response to global change, have received increasing attention among empirical studies, yet data limitations still hinder benchmarking of these pools and processes in models at ecosystem- to global-scales. Here we examined the distribution of carbon within particulate and mineral-associated fractions across an ensemble of global soil biogeochemical models, and compared model estimates to a global database of soil fractions. We found that, while bulk soil carbon stocks were seemingly comparable in magnitude and geographic distribution across the models and observations, the spread in underlying pools was much more pronounced. Indeed, the ensemble of models varied nearly 6-fold in the proportion of carbon in mineral-associated fractions, and the majority of models greatly underestimated mineral-associated carbon stocks compared to the observations. Latitudinal differences between the models resulted in divergent pool-specific climatological temperature sensitivities, with implications on projections to global change scenarios. Our study elucidates key structural and theoretical differences between models that drive divergent soil carbon projections, and clearly highlights the need to benchmark underlying carbon pools, in addition to bulk soil carbon stocks.

How to cite: Georgiou, K., Wieder, W. R., Abramoff, R. Z., Koven, C. D., Riley, W. J., Ahlström, A., Bouskill, N. J., Hartman, M., Pellegrini, A., Pierson, D., Sulman, B., Slessarev, E., Zhu, Q., Pett-Ridge, J., and Jackson, R. B.: Global distribution and climatological temperature sensitivity of soil organic matter fractions differ between observations and models , EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-6813, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-6813, 2022.