%0 Journal Article %T Contrasting carbon cycle responses of semiarid abandoned farmland to simulated warmer-drier and warmer-wetter climates. %A Zhong Z %A Wang X %A Yang C %A Wang Y %A Yang G %A Xu Y %A Li C %J Sci Total Environ %V 948 %N 0 %D 2024 Oct 20 %M 38992364 %F 10.753 %R 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.174693 %X Rewilding abandoned farmlands provides a nature-based climate solution via carbon (C) offsetting; however, the C-cycle-climate feedback in such restored ecosystems is poorly understood. Therefore, we conducted a 2-year field experiment in Loess Plateau, China, to determine the impacts of warming (∼1.4 °C) and altered precipitation (±25 %, ±50 %, and ambient), alone or in concert on soil C pools and associated C fluxes. Experimental warming significantly enhanced soil respiration without affecting the ecosystem net C uptake and soil C storage; these variables tended to increase along the manipulated precipitation gradient. Their interactions increased ecosystem net C uptake (synergism) but decreased soil respiration and soil C accumulation (antagonism) compared with a single warming or altered precipitation. Additionally, most variables related to the C cycle tended to be more responsive to increased precipitation, but the ecosystem net C uptake responded intensely to warming and decreased precipitation. Overall, ecosystem net C uptake and soil C storage increased by 94.4 % and 8.2 %, respectively, under the warmer-wetter scenario; however, phosphorus deficiency restricted soil C accumulation under these climatic conditions. By contrast, ecosystem net C uptake and soil C storage decreased by 56.6 % and 13.6 %, respectively, when exposed to the warmer-drier climate, intensifying its tendency toward a C source. Therefore, the C sink function of semiarid abandoned farmland was unsustainable. Our findings emphasize the need for management of post-abandonment regeneration to sustain ecosystem C sequestration in the context of climate change, aiding policymakers in the development of C-neutral routes in abandoned regions.