Soil–Atmosphere Greenhouse Gas Fluxes Across a Land-Use Gradient in the Andes–Amazon Transition Zone: Insights for Climate Innovation
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This study evaluated the seasonal variability of soil–atmosphere greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes—carbon dioxide (CO₂), methane (CH₄), and nitrous oxide (N₂O)—across a land-use gradient in the Andean–Amazon transition zone of Colombia. The gradient included five land-use types incorporating at least one innovative climate-smart prac-tice—improved pasture (IP), cacao agroforestry system (CaAS), copoazu agroforestry system (CoAS), secondary forest with agroforestry enrichment (SFAE), and moriche palm swamp ecosystem (MPSE)—alongside the dominant regional land uses, old-growth forest (OF) and degraded pasture (DP). Soil GHG fluxes varied markedly among land-use types and between seasons. CO₂ fluxes were consistently higher during the dry season, whereas CH₄ and N₂O fluxes peaked in the rainy season. Agroecological and restoration systems exhibited substantially lower CO₂ emissions (7.34–9.74 Mg CO₂-C ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹) compared with DP (18.85 Mg CO₂-C ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹) during the rainy season, and lower N₂O fluxes (0.21–1.04 Mg CO₂-C ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹) during the dry season. In contrast, the MPSE presented high CH₄ emissions in the rainy season (300.45 kg CH₄-C ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹). Across all land uses, CO₂ was the dominant contributor to the total GWP (> 95% of emissions). The highest global warming potential (GWP) occurred in DP, whereas CaAS, CoAS and MPSE exhibited the lowest values. Soil temperature, pH, exchangeable acidity, texture, and bulk density play a decisive role in regulating GHG fluxes, whereas climatic factors, such as air temperature and relative humidity, influenced fluxes indirectly by modulating soil conditions. These findings underscore the role of diversified agroforestry and restoration systems in mit-igating GHG emissions and the need to integrate soil and climate drivers into regional climate models.