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Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of...

Date post: 21-Dec-2015
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Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? •Global soils have a large C pool •Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond to atmospheric processes on annual to decadal time scales •One of the immediate effects of human induced global change is warming - will that change soil C?
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Page 1: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.

Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback?

•Global soils have a large C pool

•Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond to atmospheric processes on annual to decadal time scales

•One of the immediate effects of human induced global change is warming - will that change soil C?

Page 2: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.
Page 3: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.
Page 4: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.
Page 5: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.
Page 6: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.

Soil C and Temperature

dC/dt = I - kC

•Climate change may change inputs•Will climate change loss rates? (k)

–Virtually all studies show it will (at least on short term)\–Microbes increase rates, decompose the most readily accessable C materials (and therefore increase CO2 losses)

•Some recent discussions have confused soil respiration vs. MAT with the need to know rate (K vs. MAT).

–Led to highly publicized view that soils will exacerbate global CO2 buildup during warming….

Page 7: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.
Page 8: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.

The contrast between rate and total respiration- respiration must be normalized to the amount of

reactant available

temperature

Soil Carbon (k) Decomposition rates

Resulting soil respiration rates

Page 9: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.

Sierra Nevada Soils as Guide to Climate Response

Page 10: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.

A Simple Analysis of How Soils May Respond to Global Warming Based on Changes in k

a one time 0.5C increase in temperature:results based on Sierran soils

Page 11: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.

Simple Analysis Assuming Constant Warming (0.03C/yr)

C(t) = ((−I

k f+Ct−1)e

−k f t ) +I

k f

where : t = specificyear

and

k f isadjustedforeachtimestep

Page 12: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.

Soils in the UN Climate Change Negotiations (Kyoto Protocol)

•UN “assessment report” of CO2 increases and its climatic and ecological ramifications presents a chilling view of next century

•Ratifying Kyoto Protocol would obligate–Industrial (Annex 1) countried to reduce their CO2 emissions during the period 2008 to 2012 to levels below their production in 1990–This ‘reduction’ merely slows the rate of CO2 buildup in atmosphere, and doesn’t stop it.

•Ways countries can reduce net CO2 emissions:–Reduce fossil fuel consumption–Increase C storage (forests, soils, etc)–Pay Annex 2 countries (tropics) to stop deforestation

Page 13: Soils and Global Warming: A Positive or Negative Feedback? Global soils have a large C pool Rates of cycling of this pool indicate that they can affect/respond.

Present Status of UN Climate Change Agreement

• Visit web site http://unfccc.int/essential_background/convention/items/2627.php

•Should have enough countries to ratify agreement and implement it

•US has not signed-will face financial sanctions

•Individual countries taking more aggressive stance: e.g. Britian wants to go to ~ 40% renewable energy in 50 years….


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