CLIMATE SCIENCE
Human use has increased grasslands' contribution to climate change
by Brooks Hays
Washington DC (UPI) Jan 5, 2021

Once a carbon sink, grasslands have evolved to become a net positive source of greenhouse gas over the last few hundreds years.

In a new study, published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications, researchers traced the influence of grasslands on the planet's climate. Their analysis revealed the ways human activities have transformed Earth's largest terrestrial biome.

Like all biomes and ecosystems, grasslands emit and absorb carbon dioxide. Grassland soils also release nitrous oxide, while grazers that call grasslands home emit methane.

For the new study, researchers examined the fluxes in these three gases on managed and natural grasslands over the last several centuries.

"We built and applied a new spatially explicit global grassland model that includes mechanisms of soil organic matter and plant productivity changes driven by historical shifts in livestock and the reduction of wild grazers in each region," lead study author Jinfeng Chang said in a news release.

Chang led the researchers while working at the International Institute for Applied Systems in Austria, but now works at Zhejiang University in China

"This model is one of the first to simulate the regional details of land use change and degradation from livestock overload," Chang said. "We also looked at the effect of fires and soil carbon losses by water erosion; CH4 emissions from animals; N2O emissions from animal excrement, manure, and mineral fertilizer applications; and atmospheric nitrogen deposition."

The data showed that since 1750, as humans have introduced more and more livestock to the planet's grasslands, the biome's CH4 and N20 emissions have increased by a factor of 2.5.

Sparsely grazed and natural grasslands have enhanced their carbon absorption and storage services over the last century, but intensively managed grasslands have become a net source of greenhouse gas emissions.

In fact, greenhouse gas emissions levels on heavily grazed grasslands rival those of croplands.

"Our results show that the different human activities that have affected grasslands have shifted the balance of greenhouse gas removals and emissions more towards warming in intensively exploited pastures, and more towards cooling in natural and semi-natural systems," said co-author Thomas Gasser, researcher at IIASA. "Coincidently, until recently the two types of grasslands have almost been canceling each other out."

Unfortunately, as pasture lands have expanded and livestock numbers have risen dramatically, global grasslands have become a net source of greenhouse gas emissions.

"Global grasslands will accelerate climate warming if better policies are not put in place to favor soil carbon increases, stop deforestation for ranching, and develop climate-smart livestock production systems," Gasser said.

Authors of the new study suggest land managers and policy makers should take a closer look at the ecosystem services, including greenhouse gas absorption and sequestration, that sparsely grazed or wild grasslands can offer.

"In the context of low-warming climate targets, the mitigating or amplifying role of grasslands will depend on a number of aspects," said study co-author Philippe Ciais.

"This includes future changes in grass-fed livestock numbers; the stability of accumulated soil carbon in grasslands; and whether carbon storage can be further increased over time or if it will saturate, as observed in long-term experiments," said Ciais, a researcher at the Laboratory for Sciences of Climate and Environment.


Related Links
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation

CLIMATE SCIENCE
GAO: Defense Dept. needs to better track climate change protections
Washington DC (UPI) Dec 23, 2020
The Defense Department's $67 million in aid to bases vulnerable to weather issues and climate change lacks a method to gauge success, a report said. The 92-page report by the General Accountability Office noted that although the Pentagon maintains records of where 2020 funding was applied, it "doesn't currently measure whether its grant programs are achieving their intended objectives. We recommended DOD establish performance measures for the programs." The Defense Department administers ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Norway rescuers seek landslide survivors into the night

Scores dead in PNG landslide; 10 missing after Norway mudslide; Aid arrives for Croatians

Fukushima nuclear debris removal delayed by virus

Lives cut short: the American children lost to stray bullets

CLIMATE SCIENCE
New radiation vest technology protects astronauts, doctors

Defects aid mother-of-pearl's assembly, according to new research

Spontaneous robot dances highlight a new kind of order in active matter

Order and disorder in crystalline ice explained

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Study: Climate change isn't causing drylands to get drier

New technique could help scientists identify heat-stressed corals

Caspian crisis: Sinking sea levels threaten biodiversity, economy and regional stability

Sudan, Egypt, Ethiopia agree to more Nile dam talks

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Researchers discover a new tool for reconstructing ancient sea ice to study climate change

Subsea permafrost is still waking up after 12,000 years

NASA's AIM Sees First Night-Shining Clouds of Antarctic Summer

Study suggests great earthquakes as cause of Arctic warming

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Organic, non-organic meats have similar greenhouse gas impacts

Austrians press EU to talk turkey, raise farm standards

Scientists suggested a way to measure soil properties at any depth without digging

Climate change ravages Kashmir's 'red gold' saffron crop

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Scientists develop new approach to understanding massive volcanic eruptions

Reawakened geyser does not foretell Yellowstone volcanic eruptions

Croatia earthquake toll rises to seven as search continues

6.3-magnitude earthquake rocks Philippines: USGS

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Bomb kills two French soldiers in Mali

USS Nimitz leaves Somalia for home port after 10-month deployment

Lack of cooperation hinders China's debt relief to Africa

Rangers at DR Congo wildlife haven protest over pay

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Researchers use DNA to track original settlers of Caribbean islands

Over half of Chinese adults now overweight: official

The world's oldest story? Astronomers say global myths about 'seven sisters' stars may reach back 100,000 years

Ancient DNA suggests people from Philippines may have settled Mariana Islands