AI Article Synopsis

  • Changes in forest and agricultural land management can enhance carbon storage, helping reduce atmospheric carbon emissions from energy production.
  • The study examines three practices in Virginia: afforestation of marginal and riparian agricultural lands, and improved tillage practices for row crops, determining the carbon storage potential for each across the state and specific regions.
  • The results revealed that afforesting marginal lands has the highest carbon storage potential at 1.4 Tg C per year over 20 years, while the other practices contribute less; collectively, they could reduce Virginia's energy-related CO2 emissions by approximately 3.4% in the next two decades, supporting broader carbon management efforts.

Article Abstract

Changes in forest and agricultural land management practices have the potential to increase carbon (C) storage by terrestrial systems, thus offsetting C emissions to the atmosphere from energy production. This study assesses that potential for three terrestrial management practices within the state of Virginia, USA: afforestation of marginal agricultural lands; afforestation of riparian agricultural lands; and changing tillage practices for row crops; each was evaluated on a statewide basis and for seven regions within the state. Lands eligible for each practice were identified, and the C storage potential of each practice on those lands was estimated through a modeling procedure that utilized land-resource characteristics represented in Geographic Information System databases. Marginal agricultural lands' afforestation was found to have the greatest potential (1.4 Tg C yr(-1), on average, over the first 20 years) if applied on all eligible lands, followed by riparian afforestation (0.2 Tg C yr(-1) over 20 years) and tillage conversion (0.1 Tg C yr(-1) over 14 years). The regions with the largest potentials are the Ridge and Valley of western Virginia (due to extensive areas of steep, shallow soils) and in the Mid-Atlantic Coastal Plain in eastern Virginia (wet soils). Although widespread and rapid implementation of the three modeled practices could be expected to offset only about 3.4% of Virginia's energy-related CO(2) emissions over the following 20 years (equivalent to about 8.5% of a Kyoto Treaty-based target), they could contribute to achievement of C-management goals if implemented along with other mitigation measures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-005-0368-yDOI Listing

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