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Large climate mitigation potential from adding trees to agricultural lands
Author(s) -
Chapman Melissa,
Walker Wayne S.,
CookPatton Susan C.,
Ellis Peter W.,
Farina Mary,
Griscom Bronson W.,
Baccini Alessandro
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/gcb.15121
Subject(s) - environmental science , pasture , agroforestry , biomass (ecology) , greenhouse gas , context (archaeology) , agriculture , agricultural land , climate change , carbon sequestration , climate change mitigation , land cover , land use , forestry , agronomy , geography , ecology , biology , carbon dioxide , archaeology
While improved management of agricultural landscapes is promoted as a promising natural climate solution, available estimates of the mitigation potential are based on coarse assessments of both agricultural extent and aboveground carbon density. Here we combine 30 meter resolution global maps of aboveground woody carbon, tree cover, and cropland extent, as well as a 1 km resolution map of global pasture land, to estimate the current and potential carbon storage of trees in nonforested portions of agricultural lands. We find that global croplands currently store 3.07 Pg of carbon (C) in aboveground woody biomass (i.e., trees) and pasture lands account for an additional 3.86 Pg C across a combined 3.76 billion ha. We then estimate the climate mitigation potential of multiple scenarios of integration and avoided loss of trees in crop and pasture lands based on region‐specific biomass distributions. We evaluate our findings in the context of nationally determined contributions and find that the majority of potential carbon storage from integration and avoided loss of trees in crop and pasture lands is in countries that do not identify agroforestry as a climate mitigation technique.

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