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Towards an integrated global framework to assess the impacts of land use and management change on soil carbon: current capability and future vision
Author(s) -
Smith Pete,
Davies Christian A.,
Ogle Stephen,
Zanchi Giuliana,
Bellarby Jessica,
Bird Neil,
Boddey Robert M.,
M Niall P.,
Powlson David,
Cowie Annette,
Noordwijk Meine,
Davis Sarah C.,
Richter Daniel DE B.,
Kryzanowski Len,
Wijk Mark T.,
Stuart Judith,
Kirton Akira,
Eggar Duncan,
NewtonCross Geraldine,
Adhya Tapan K.,
Braimoh Ademola K.
Publication year - 2012
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/j.1365-2486.2012.02689.x
Subject(s) - greenhouse gas , environmental science , soil carbon , land use , sustainability , land management , climate change mitigation , environmental resource management , land use, land use change and forestry , agricultural engineering , soil science , soil water , ecology , engineering , civil engineering , biology
I ntergovernmental P anel on C limate C hange ( IPCC ) T ier 1 methodologies commonly underpin project‐scale carbon accounting for changes in land use and management and are used in frameworks for L ife C ycle A ssessment and carbon footprinting of food and energy crops. These methodologies were intended for use at large spatial scales. This can introduce error in predictions at finer spatial scales. There is an urgent need for development and implementation of higher tier methodologies that can be applied at fine spatial scales (e.g. farm/project/plantation) for food and bioenergy crop greenhouse gas (GHG) accounting to facilitate decision making in the land‐based sectors. Higher tier methods have been defined by IPCC and must be well evaluated and operate across a range of domains (e.g. climate region, soil type, crop type, topography), and must account for land use transitions and management changes being implemented. Furthermore, the data required to calibrate and drive the models used at higher tiers need to be available and applicable at fine spatial resolution, covering the meteorological, soil, cropping system and management domains, with quantified uncertainties. Testing the reliability of the models will require data either from sites with repeated measurements or from chronosequences. We review current global capability for estimating changes in soil carbon at fine spatial scales and present a vision for a framework capable of quantifying land use change and management impacts on soil carbon, which could be used for addressing issues such as bioenergy and biofuel sustainability, food security, forest protection, and direct/indirect impacts of land use change. The aim of this framework is to provide a globally accepted standard of carbon measurement and modelling appropriate for GHG accounting that could be applied at project to national scales (allowing outputs to be scaled up to a country level), to address the impacts of land use and land management change on soil carbon.

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