Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions?

Climate change mitigation and food security are two of the main challenges of human society. Agroforestry systems, defined as the presence of trees on external and internal boundaries, cropland, or on any other available niche of farmland, can provide both climate change mitigation and food. There a...

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Main Authors: Feliciano, Diana, Ledo, Alicia, Hillier, Jon, Nayak, Dali Rani
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90575
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author Feliciano, Diana
Ledo, Alicia
Hillier, Jon
Nayak, Dali Rani
author_browse Feliciano, Diana
Hillier, Jon
Ledo, Alicia
Nayak, Dali Rani
author_facet Feliciano, Diana
Ledo, Alicia
Hillier, Jon
Nayak, Dali Rani
author_sort Feliciano, Diana
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Climate change mitigation and food security are two of the main challenges of human society. Agroforestry systems, defined as the presence of trees on external and internal boundaries, cropland, or on any other available niche of farmland, can provide both climate change mitigation and food. There are several types of agroforestry systems with different rates of above ground and soil carbon (C) sequestration. The amount of carbon sequestered can depend on the type of system, climate, time since land use change and previous land use. Data was collected from a total of 86 published and peer reviewed studies on soil and above ground carbon sequestration for different agroforestry systems, climates and regions in the world. The objective was to understand which agroforestry systems provide the greatest benefits, and what are the main factors influencing, soil and above ground carbon sequestration. The results show that, on average, more soil carbon sequestration occurs in agroforestry systems classified as silvopastoral (4.38 tC ha−1 yr−1), and more above ground carbon sequestration occurs in improved fallows (11.29 tC ha−1 yr−1). On average, carbon benefits are greater in agroforestry systems Tropical climates when compared to agroforestry systems located in other climates, both in terms of soil (2.23 tC ha−1 yr−1) and above ground (4.85 tC ha−1 yr−1). In terms of land use change, the greatest above ground carbon sequestration (12.8 tC ha−1 yr−1) occurs when degraded land is replaced by improved fallow and the greatest soil carbon sequestration (4.38 tC ha−1 yr−1) results from the transition of a grassland system to a silvopastoral system. Time since the change is implemented was the main factor influencing above ground carbon sequestration, while climate mainly influences soil carbon sequestration most. The results of the analysis may be used to inform practitioners and policy makers on the most effective agroforestry system for carbon sequestration. The lack of data on carbon stocks before the implementation land use change and the lack of reporting on soil sampling design and variances were the main limitations in the data. The need to report this data should be considered in future studies if agroforestry systems are expected to play an important role as a climate change mitigation strategy.
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spelling CGSpace905752024-05-01T08:18:07Z Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions? Feliciano, Diana Ledo, Alicia Hillier, Jon Nayak, Dali Rani climate change food security agriculture Climate change mitigation and food security are two of the main challenges of human society. Agroforestry systems, defined as the presence of trees on external and internal boundaries, cropland, or on any other available niche of farmland, can provide both climate change mitigation and food. There are several types of agroforestry systems with different rates of above ground and soil carbon (C) sequestration. The amount of carbon sequestered can depend on the type of system, climate, time since land use change and previous land use. Data was collected from a total of 86 published and peer reviewed studies on soil and above ground carbon sequestration for different agroforestry systems, climates and regions in the world. The objective was to understand which agroforestry systems provide the greatest benefits, and what are the main factors influencing, soil and above ground carbon sequestration. The results show that, on average, more soil carbon sequestration occurs in agroforestry systems classified as silvopastoral (4.38 tC ha−1 yr−1), and more above ground carbon sequestration occurs in improved fallows (11.29 tC ha−1 yr−1). On average, carbon benefits are greater in agroforestry systems Tropical climates when compared to agroforestry systems located in other climates, both in terms of soil (2.23 tC ha−1 yr−1) and above ground (4.85 tC ha−1 yr−1). In terms of land use change, the greatest above ground carbon sequestration (12.8 tC ha−1 yr−1) occurs when degraded land is replaced by improved fallow and the greatest soil carbon sequestration (4.38 tC ha−1 yr−1) results from the transition of a grassland system to a silvopastoral system. Time since the change is implemented was the main factor influencing above ground carbon sequestration, while climate mainly influences soil carbon sequestration most. The results of the analysis may be used to inform practitioners and policy makers on the most effective agroforestry system for carbon sequestration. The lack of data on carbon stocks before the implementation land use change and the lack of reporting on soil sampling design and variances were the main limitations in the data. The need to report this data should be considered in future studies if agroforestry systems are expected to play an important role as a climate change mitigation strategy. 2018-02 2018-01-24T15:34:11Z 2018-01-24T15:34:11Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90575 en Open Access Elsevier Feliciano D, Ledo A, Hillier J, Nayak DR. 2018. Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions? Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 245:117-129.
spellingShingle climate change
food security
agriculture
Feliciano, Diana
Ledo, Alicia
Hillier, Jon
Nayak, Dali Rani
Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions?
title Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions?
title_full Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions?
title_fullStr Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions?
title_full_unstemmed Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions?
title_short Which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions?
title_sort which agroforestry options give the greatest soil and above ground carbon benefits in different world regions
topic climate change
food security
agriculture
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90575
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