4.8 Article

Historical carbon dioxide emissions caused by land-use changes are possibly larger than assumed

Journal

NATURE GEOSCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages 79-+

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/NGEO2882

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EU FP7 grants LUC4C [603542]
  2. OPERAS [308393]
  3. Helmholtz Association in its ATMO programme
  4. LUC4C
  5. German Research Foundation's Emmy Noether Programme [PO 1751/1-1]
  6. Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (ERTDF) from the Ministry of the Environment, Japan [S-10]
  7. Joint UK DECC/Defra Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme [GA01101]
  8. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [647204]
  9. Swiss National Science Foundation
  10. ERC SyG project IMBALANCE-P: 'Effects of phosphorus limitations on Life, Earth system and Society' grant [610028]
  11. FP7 through project EMBRACE [282672]

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The terrestrial biosphere absorbs about 20% of fossil-fuel CO2 emissions. The overall magnitude of this sink is constrained by the difference between emissions, the rate of increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations, and the ocean sink. However, the land sink is actually composed of two largely counteracting fluxes that are poorly quantified: fluxes from land-use change and CO2 uptake by terrestrial ecosystems. Dynamic global vegetation model simulations suggest that CO2 emissions from land-use change have been substantially underestimated because processes such as tree harvesting and land clearing from shifting cultivation have not been considered. As the overall terrestrial sink is constrained, a larger net flux as a result of land-use change implies that terrestrial uptake of CO2 is also larger, and that terrestrial ecosystems might have greater potential to sequester carbon in the future. Consequently, reforestation projects and efforts to avoid further deforestation could represent important mitigation pathways, with co-benefits for biodiversity. It is unclear whether a larger land carbon sink can be reconciled with our current understanding of terrestrial carbon cycling. Our possible underestimation of the historical residual terrestrial carbon sink adds further uncertainty to our capacity to predict the future of terrestrial carbon uptake and losses.

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