• Increased tree cover in savannas provide

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Wed Mar 16 22:30:42 2022
    Increased tree cover in savannas provides limited benefit in climate
    fight

    Date:
    March 16, 2022
    Source:
    Yale University
    Summary:
    One proposed strategy in the fight against climate change is
    to increase tree cover in the world's savannas, either through
    the planting of new trees or fire suppression, to increase the
    uptake of atmospheric carbon dioxide. However, a new study of
    African savannas suggests this approach is far less effective
    than previously estimated. "Increasing tree cover in savannas,
    whether via afforestation or fire suppression, is unlikely to yield
    the substantial gains in ecosystem carbon storage that have been
    advertised," said Carla Staver, associate professor of ecology
    and evolutionary biology in Yale's Faculty of Arts and Sciences,
    associate director of the Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies,
    and senior author of the new study.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    One proposed strategy in the fight against climate change is to increase
    tree cover in the world's savannas, either through the planting of new
    trees or fire suppression, to increase the uptake of atmospheric carbon dioxide. However, a new Yale-led study of African savannas suggests this approach is far less effective than previously estimated.


    ========================================================================== "Increasing tree cover in savannas, whether via afforestation or fire suppression, is unlikely to yield the substantial gains in ecosystem
    carbon storage that have been advertised," said Carla Staver, associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology in Yale's Faculty of Arts
    and Sciences, associate director of the Yale Institute for Biospheric
    Studies, and senior author of the new study.

    The study was published March 17 in the journal Nature.

    Savannas cover about a fifth of the Earth's land surface. Because they
    have fewer trees than forests, they have been increasingly targeted
    for their potential to capture carbon. Some studies projected that
    afforesting the worlds savannas could capture 280 tons of carbon per
    hectare, a number that assumes that tropical savannas would store as
    much carbon as tropical forests.

    A team led by Yong Zhou, a G. E. Hutchinson Environmental Postdoctoral
    Fellow in Staver's lab and lead author of the study, questioned some of
    the projected climate benefits of afforestation in tropical savannas,
    which account for more than half of the planet's fire-related carbon
    emissions.

    For the study, the research team used data from a decades-old experiment
    at Kruger National Park in South Africa -- where for 68 years scientists
    have studied how fire management affects the landscape -- to better
    understand whether increased tree cover from fire suppression actually increases carbon sequestration.

    To measure the amount of carbon stored in savannas under different fire regimes, the Yale researchers -- along with scientists from Harvard
    University, the U.S. Forest Service, and Kruger National Park -- used
    direct measurements of tree and grass biomass taken from the experiment, combined with remote sensing techniques and chemical analysis of soil
    samples.

    The good news, they found, is that even frequently burned savannas store
    more carbon in soil and in roots than previously estimated, even when prescribed burns occur annually. This finding highlights the importance
    of natural savannas -- which are under widespread threat from land use conversion -- for storing carbon.

    But the study also found that increasing tree cover through fire
    suppression captured much less carbon than previously estimated. Despite
    a 78% increase in tree cover, this strategy captured only 35% more
    carbon overall, corresponding to total gains of about 23 tons per
    hectare. These new, direct estimates from Kruger National Park suggest
    that the carbon sequestration potential of savannas is less than 10%
    of previous estimates.

    "Previous models relied on sparse data to promise a very large carbon
    storage benefit to increasing tree cover in savannas," Staver said. "But
    our direct measures show that these were not good assumptions."
    Staver and Zhou stressed that these findings need to be replicated
    in other savanna areas around the world. "More measurements from more
    savanna sites are still needed," Zhou said.

    "But the findings are substantial," Staver said. "We need to recalibrate
    our assessments of the role savannas play in the global carbon cycle. And
    we should not be relying on afforestation to save us from accelerating human-driven carbon emissions."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Yale_University. Original written
    by Bill Hathaway. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Zhou, Y., Singh, J., Butnor, J.R. et al. Limited increases in
    savanna
    carbon stocks over decades of fire suppression. Nature, 2022 DOI:
    10.1038/s41586-022-04438-1 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220316120815.htm

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