Publication | Open Access
The Impact of Agricultural Soil Erosion on the Global Carbon Cycle
1K
Citations
27
References
2007
Year
Soil ErosionBiogeochemistryCarbon SequestrationGlobal Carbon CycleEngineeringSoil Carbon CycleGeographyAgricultural Soil ErosionSoil DegradationGlobal Carbon SinkCarbon SinkLand DegradationAgricultural ErosionCarbon CycleAgricultural EmissionsEarth ScienceDeforestation
Agricultural soil erosion is thought to perturb the global carbon cycle, but estimates of its effect range from a source of 1 petagram per year(-1) to a sink of the same magnitude. By using caesium-137 and carbon inventory measurements from a large-scale survey, we found consistent evidence for an erosion-induced sink of atmospheric carbon equivalent to approximately 26% of the carbon transported by erosion. Based on this relationship, we estimated a global carbon sink of 0.12 (range 0.06 to 0.27) petagrams of carbon per year(-1) resulting from erosion in the world's agricultural landscapes. Our analysis directly challenges the view that agricultural erosion represents an important source or sink for atmospheric CO2.
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Carbon balance of the terrestrial biosphere in the Twentieth Century: Analyses of CO<sub>2</sub>, climate and land use effects with four process‐based ecosystem models A. D. McGuire, Stephen Sitch, J. S. Clein, EngineeringTerrestrial Ecosystem ProductivityEarth System ScienceBiogeochemical ModelEarth Science | 2001 | 819 |
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