Abstract
The terrestrial biota is a crucial part of the long-term carbon cycle via the deposition of biomass as coal and other sedimentary organic matter and the impact of plants, fungi, and microbial life on the weathering of silicate minerals. Understanding these processes and their changes through time requires both geochemical modeling of the system as well as expertise in the living and fossil biotas and their ecological interactions, but details of these components are often lost in translation between disciplines. Here, we highlight misconceptions of the long-term carbon cycle that most frequently infiltrate the literature and hamper progress: mass balance requirements, the nature and duration of perturbations, opposing timescale constraints on biological and geological processes, and the role of models.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Boyce, C. K., Ibarra, D. E., & D’Antonio, M. P. (2023). What we talk about when we talk about the long-term carbon cycle. New Phytologist, 237(5), 1550–1557. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.18665
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.