Tuesday, 14 November 2006
202-10

What to Expect with Global Warming.

William Schlesinger, Duke Univ, Box 90329, Nicholas School of Env & Earth Science, Durham, NC 27708

Changes in the carbon stored in soils will have a dramatic impact on the levels of carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere and the rate of global warming during this century.   Losses of organic carbon from soils at high latitudes may be balanced by increased storage of soil carbon from plant growth at high levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide. The results from Free-Air Carbon Dioxide Enrichment (FACE) experiments indicate only small net accumulations of soil carbon, largely in the forest floor.  Thus, losses of carbon from boreal and peatland soils are likely to dominate the global change in the soil carbon pools. Changes of inorganic carbon in deserts will be much smaller, and not likely to impact the trajectory of atmospheric carbon dioxide. Most human efforts to increase soil carbon in agricultural soils produce short-term gains that are often not greater than the carbon dioxide released from the various actions taken to implement them.

Back to Symposium--Towards a Predictive Understanding of Belowground Ecosystem Responses to Global Change
Back to S07 Forest, Range & Wildland Soils

Back to The ASA-CSSA-SSSA International Annual Meetings (November 12-16, 2006)