B31F-05
Estimation of soil organic carbon in forests of the United States

Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 09:00
2008 (Moscone West)
Grant M Domke1, Charles Hobart Perry2, Brian F Walters3, Christopher W Woodall3, Lucas E Nave4 and Christopher Swanston5, (1)USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station, St. Paul, MN, United States, (2)USDA Forest Service, Saint Paul, MN, United States, (3)Northern Research Station, Saint Paul, MN, United States, (4)University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Ann Arbor, MI, United States, (5)US Forest Service Houghton, Northern Institute of Applied Climate Science, Houghton, MI, United States
Abstract:
Soil organic carbon (SOC) is the largest terrestrial carbon (C) sink on earth and management of this pool is a critical component of global efforts to mitigate atmospheric C concentrations. Soil organic carbon is also a key indicator of soil quality as it affects essential biological, chemical, and physical soil functions such as nutrient cycling, water retention, and soil structure maintenance. Much of the SOC on earth is found in forest ecosystems and is thought to be relatively stable. That said, there is growing evidence that SOC may be sensitive to disturbance and global change drivers. In the United States (US), SOC in forests is monitored by the national forest inventory (NFI) conducted by the Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) program within the US Department of Agriculture, Forest Service. The FIA program currently uses SOC predictions based on SSURGO/STATSGO data to populate the NFI. Most of estimates of SOC in forests from the SSURGO/STATSGO data are based primarily upon expert opinion and lack systematic field observations. The FIA program has been consistently measuring soil attributes as part of the NFI since 2001 and has amassed an extensive inventory of SOC in forests in the conterminous US and coastal Alaska. Here we present estimates of SOC obtained using data from the NFI and International Soil Carbon Network and describe the modeling framework used to compile estimates for United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change reporting.