Published February 29, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Inorganic carbon is overlooked in global soil carbon research: A bibliometric analysis

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. University of Illinois
  • 3. Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology
  • 4. University of California, Riverside
  • 5. University of Birmingham
  • 6. Jiangsu University
  • 7. Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University
  • 8. Lahore University of Management Sciences
  • 9. Northwest A&F University
  • 10. University of Nottingham
  • 11. Russian Academy of Sciences
  • 12. University of Göttingen

Description

Soils are a major player in the global carbon (C) cycle and climate change by functioning as a sink or a source of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). The largest terrestrial C reservoir in soils comprises two main pools: organic (SOC) and inorganic C (SIC), each having distinct fates and functions but with a large disparity in global research attention. This study quantified global soil C research trends and the proportional focus on SOC and SIC pools based on a bibliometric analysis and raise the importance of SIC pools fully underrepresented in research, applications, and modeling. Studies on soil C pools started in 1905 and has produced over 47,000 publications (>1.7 million citations). Although the global C stocks down to 2 m depth are nearly the same for SOC and SIC, the research has dominantly examined SOC (>96 % of publications and citations) with a minimal share on SIC (<4%). Approximately 40 % of the soil C research was related to climate change. Despite poor coverage and publications, the climate change-related research impact (citations per document) of SIC studies was higher than that of SOC. Mineral associated organic carbon, machine learning, soil health, and biochar were the recent top trend topics for SOC research (2020–2023), whereas digital soil mapping, soil properties, soil acidification, and calcite were recent top trend topics for SIC. SOC research was contributed by 151 countries compared to 88 for SIC. As assessed by publications, soil C research was mainly concentrated in a few countries, with only 9 countries accounting for 70 % of the research. China and the USA were the major producers (45 %), collaborators (37 %), and funders of soil C research. SIC is a long-lived soil C pool with a turnover rate (leaching and recrystallization) of more than 1000 years in natural ecosystems, but intensive agricultural practices have accelerated SIC losses, making SIC an important player in global C cycle and climate change. The lack of attention and investment towards SIC research could jeopardize the ongoing efforts to mitigate climate change impacts to meet the 1.5–2.0 °C targets under the Paris Climate Agreement of 2015. This bibliographic study calls to expand the research focus on SIC and including SIC fluxes in C budgets and models, without which the representation of the global C cycle is incomplete.

Data availability

Data will be made available on request.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.116831
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:11290

Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China
42150410386
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Delivering Sustainable Wheat (DSW)
Unknown funder
Xinjiang Tian Chi Specially-Appointed Professor Project
Jiangsu Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Fund
Carbon Emission Peak and Carbon Neutralization (frontier and basis)
Unknown funder
Jiangsu Specially-Appointed Professor Project
Peoples' Friendship University of Russia
Strategic Academic Leadership Program
West-Siberian Interregional Science and Education Centers
Project No. 89-DON (1)
Project CarboRus
075-15-2021-610

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering