Dam Construction as an Important Anthropogenic Activity Disturbing Soil Organic Carbon in Affected Watersheds.
2020
To explore whether and how anthropogenic
activities related to
surface water regulation (i.e., dam construction) disturb soil ecosystems
in the surrounding uplands, a long-term monitoring program was conducted
from 1998 to 2017 in the Three Gorges Reservoir Region, China. The
Three Gorges Dam (TGD) is the largest hydraulic engineering project
in the world. We present a direct, ecosystem-scale demonstration of
changes in the soil organic carbon (SOC) content in the TGD watershed
before and after the surface water was reshaped. The average SOC content
decreased from 12.9 to 9.5 g/kg between 2004 and 2012 and then recovered
to 13.8 g/kg in 2017. Dynamics of SOC were partly attributed to shifts
in the composition of soil microbial communities responsible for carbon
biogeochemistry. The shifts in microbial taxa were associated with
the changed microclimate affected by the TGD as well as global and
regional climate variability. The microclimate, soil microorganisms,
and plant organic carbon input explained 40.2% of the variation in
the SOC content. This study revealed that dam construction was an
important and indirect driver for the SOC turnover, and the subsequent
effects on the upland soil ecosystem must be considered when large-scale
disturbance activities (such as dam construction) are conducted in
the future.
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