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Langdale, England.
Photo Credit: Richard Bardgett
Scientific Frontline: "At a Glance" Summary
- Main Discovery: Total removal of livestock from upland grasslands reduces mineral-associated organic carbon (MAOC), the most stable form of soil carbon, despite increasing fast-cycling carbon in vegetation.
- Methodology: Researchers conducted a comparative analysis of 12 upland sites across an 800-kilometer gradient in the UK, matching areas ungrazed for over 10 years with neighboring grazed plots to assess carbon storage differences.
- Key Data: While grasslands store approximately one-third of global terrestrial carbon, the study reveals that ungrazed sites accumulate vulnerable, short-lived biomass at the expense of MAOC, which is capable of persisting for decades to centuries.
- Significance: Current carbon removal projects relying on "total carbon stocks" are potentially misleading, as they prioritize unstable surface carbon over the long-term security of soil-bound carbon essential for effective climate mitigation.
- Future Application: Land-use frameworks for net-zero targets should incorporate low-intensity grazing models rather than total exclusion to balance total carbon storage with the durability of soil carbon pools.
- Branch of Science: Ecology, Soil Science, Agricultural Science, and Environmental Science
- Additional Detail: The loss of stable carbon in ungrazed areas is driven by a vegetation shift to dwarf shrubs associated with ericoid mycorrhiza fungi, which accelerate the decomposition of older soil carbon to acquire nutrients.
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