Monitoring soil carbon will prepare growers for a carbon trading system

Autor: Emma C. Suddick, Moffatt K. Ngugi, Keith Paustian, Johan Six
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2013
Předmět:
Zdroj: California Agriculture, Vol 67, Iss 3, Pp 162-171 (2013)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 0008-0845
2160-8091
DOI: 10.3733/ca.v067n03p162
Popis: California growers could reap financial benefits from the low-carbon economy and cap-and-trade system envisioned by the state's AB 32 law, which seeks to lower greenhouse gas emissions statewide. Growers could gain carbon credits by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and sequestering carbon through reduced tillage and increased biomass residue incorporation. First, however, baseline stocks of soil carbon need to be assessed for various cropping systems and management practices. We designed and set up a pilot soil carbon and land-use monitoring network at several perennial cropping systems in Northern California. We compared soil carbon content in two vineyards and two orchards (walnut and almond), looking at conventional and conservation management practices, as well as in native grassland and oak woodland. We then calculated baseline estimates of the total carbon in almond, wine grape and walnut acreages statewide. The organic walnut orchard had the highest total soil carbon, and no-till vineyards had 27% more carbon in the surface soil than tilled vineyards. We estimated wine grape vineyards are storing significantly more soil carbon per acre than almond and walnut orchards. The data can be used to provide accurate information about soil carbon stocks in perennial cropping systems for a future carbon trading system.
Databáze: Directory of Open Access Journals