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Projections of Soil Organic Carbon in China: The Role of Carbon Fluxes Revealed by Explainable Artificial Intelligence
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  • Yongkun Zhang,
  • Feini Huang,
  • Xingjie Lu,
  • Wei Shangguan,
  • Gaosong Shi,
  • Ye Zhang,
  • Zhangcai Qin,
  • Zhongwang Wei,
  • Hua Yuan,
  • Yongjiu Dai
Yongkun Zhang
Sun Yat-sen University
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Feini Huang
Sun Yat-sen University
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Xingjie Lu
Sun Yat-sen University
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Wei Shangguan
Sun Yat-sen University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Gaosong Shi
Sun Yat-sen Univerisity
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Ye Zhang
Sun Yat-sen University
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Zhangcai Qin
Sun Yat-sen University
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Zhongwang Wei
Sun Yat-sen University
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Hua Yuan
Sun Yat-sen University
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Yongjiu Dai
Sun Yat-sen University
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Abstract

The impact of carbon fluxes on soil organic carbon (SOC) remains underexplored. We employed machine learning to model SOC dynamics. Our findings project an increase in China’s SOC through to the year 2100 across various Shared Socioeconomic Pathways. Sensitivity analyses have identified carbon fluxes as the main drivers for this projected rise, followed by climate and land use. Further examination using an explainable artificial intelligence method, Shapley Additive Explanations, has uncovered both spatial and temporal variations in how gross primary production (GPP) influences SOC levels. Notably, GPP’s contribution on SOC is initially negative at low levels, turning positive once a threshold of approximately 3 gC m-2d-1 is surpassed. Beyond a GPP of about 7 gC m-2d-1, its positive contribution to SOC plateaus. Critical zones for soil carbon sequestration are located around 400 mm annual precipitation line.
13 Jan 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
18 Jan 2024Published in ESS Open Archive