Solar Energy News  
FARM NEWS
Expanding Croplands Chipping Away At World's Carbon Stocks

Compared to the world's temperate regions, the tropics release nearly twice as much carbon to the atmosphere for each unit of land cleared.
by Staff Writers
Madison WI (SPX) Nov 05, 2010
Nature's capacity to store carbon, the element at the heart of global climate woes, is steadily eroding as the world's farmers expand croplands at the expense of native ecosystem such as forests.

The tradeoff between agricultural production and maintaining nature's carbon reservoirs - native trees, plants and their carbon-rich detritus in the soil - is becoming more pronounced as more and more of the world's natural ecosystems succumb to the plow.

The problem, experts say, is most acute in the tropics, where expanding agriculture often comes at the expense of the tropical forests that act as massive carbon sinks because of their rich diversity and abundance of plant life.

The seriousness of the problem is documented in the most comprehensive and fine-grained analysis of the world's existing carbon stocks and global crop yields.

The study is published online this week (Nov. 1) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) by a team of researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the University of Minnesota, Stanford University, Arizona State University and The Nature Conservancy. The article is part of a special PNAS feature on climate mitigation and agricultural productivity in the tropics.

"We analyzed the tradeoffs between carbon storage and crop production at a level of detail that has never been possible before," according to Stephen Carpenter, one of the senior authors of the study and a professor at the Center for Limnology at UW-Madison.

"The main news is that agricultural production by clearing land in the tropics releases a lot of greenhouse gases per unit of food produced."

Compared to the world's temperate regions, the tropics release nearly twice as much carbon to the atmosphere for each unit of land cleared, explains Paul C. West, a UW-Madison graduate student and the lead author of the new study.

"Tropical forests store a tremendous amount of carbon, and when a forest is cleared, not only do you lose more carbon, but crop yields are not nearly as high as they are in temperate areas."

"This creates a kind of 'double whammy' for a lot of tropical agriculture: we have to clear carbon-rich ecosystems to create tropical croplands, and unfortunately they often have lower yields than temperate systems," says Jonathan Foley, director of the University of Minnesota's Institute on the Environment and a co-author on the study.

"In terms of balancing the needs of food production and slowing carbon dioxide emissions, this is a tough tradeoff."

In the tropics, for example, it is estimated that for every ton of crop yield, carbon stocks are diminished by as much as 75 tons. Such attrition, say West and his colleagues, makes a strong case for intensifying agriculture on already-converted land instead of putting new fields into production.

"One path is to expand agricultural land," says West. "The other path is to intensify agriculture on existing lands. The realty is there will be some of both."

Today, about 20 percent of the land in temperate regions is in cropland. In the tropics, 11 percent of the land is farmed. However, in the tropics pressure to plant more land is growing fastest due to increasing human population, changing diets, food security concerns, and a rising demand for the raw materials of biofuels.

Carbon is one of the planet's most abundant elements. It is present in all known life forms and moves naturally between the biosphere, oceans and atmosphere in a process that allows the element to be continuously recycled. Human processes, and in particular agriculture, accelerate the process by rapidly converting carbon stocks in trees, other plants and the soil to carbon dioxide, the primary greenhouse gas.

Global carbon stocks, notes West, can be analogous to a checking account: "The math is pretty simple. When you clear a forest, it is like making a big withdrawal from the checking account."

The new study utilized a combination of satellite data and government reports to determine the extent of cultivation for 175 different crop plants worldwide.

Estimates of global carbon stocks in natural vegetation, obtained from a recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, were based on field measurements and averaged according to vegetation type, climate and continent. The data were then used to quantify and map the tradeoff between carbon stocks and crop production globally on a grid at a resolution of 10 kilometers by 10 kilometers.

"We have a very fine resolution of both what the carbon stocks and the yields are globally," says West. "Spatially, it is much more explicit than anything that has been produced before."

The result, explains the Wisconsin researcher, is a set of "paint by numbers maps" showing global cropland distribution and yields, and changes in carbon stock due to cropland conversion.

Carpenter, West and Foley believe the new analysis will be a valuable tool for governments, nonprofit organizations and businesses. Already, commercial carbon exchanges are beginning to emerge and detailed knowledge of where carbon stocks are preserved or could be expanded will be valuable information.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


FARM NEWS
Scientists Find That Evergreen Agriculture Boosts Crop Yields
The Hague, Netherlands (SPX) Nov 05, 2010
A unique acacia known as a "fertilizer tree" has typically led to a doubling or tripling of maize yields in smallholder agriculture in Zambia and Malawi, according to evidence presented at a conference in the Hague this week. The findings were central to the arguments of agroforestry experts at the conference, who urged decision makers to spread this technology more widely throughout the A ... read more







FARM NEWS
Pennycress Could Go From Nuisance Weed To New Source Of Biofuel

Grasses Have Potential As Alternate Ethanol Crop

Leading Advanced Biofuel Groups Meet At White House

ADM To Construct Biodiesel Facility In Brazil

FARM NEWS
Virtual Flight On A Robotic Arm

Studying Child-Mother Interactions To Design Robots With Social Skills

Advanced Ruggedized Robotic Exoskeleton Undergoes Validation Testing

Robots are lords of the dance at South Korean festival

FARM NEWS
South Korea plans offshore wind project

Buoyant Times Ahead For Offshore Resource Assessments

Suzlon eyes China's wind power market

Offshore Wind A Mixed Bag

FARM NEWS
China says its car boom is ruining air quality

Fiat, Toyota 'years ahead' of EU emissions targets: research

GM first foreign carmaker to sell two million units in China

First Car To Have Entire Body 3D Printed

FARM NEWS
China-Japan 'ship collision video' leaked on YouTube

Outlook improves for two large southern Iraq oilfields: SOC

Blackouts trigger diesel shortage in China: state media

Iran cuts into Israel-Lebanon gas dispute

FARM NEWS
Getting A Grip On CO2 Capture

EU sticks to 20-percent carbon cuts

Spitzer Telescope Finds Space Buckyballs Thrive

Australia's PM launches new bid to price pollution

FARM NEWS
Californians reject proposal to repeal greenhouse gas law

Scarcity Of New Energy Minerals Will Trigger Trade Wars

Wheeled Snow Shovel Is Potent Green Alternative To Belching Snow Blowers

Green Carbon Center Takes All-Inclusive View Of Energy

FARM NEWS
New Discoveries Concerning Pre-Columbian Settlements In The Amazon

Brazil mulls land auction to beat logging

Footage shows land clearing threatens Indonesia tigers: WWF

Litter collected, trees planted for global climate campaign


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement