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1/5/2017 Management options for soil carbon sequestration in Nordic agroecosystems Thomas Kätterer Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, SLU The soil plays a central role in the global carbon cycle (Pg C; billion tons) 750 +4.4 per year 550 1 500 (1m depth) 40 000 Sediments, coal, gas, oil Kätterer, 1998 2 1 1/5/2017 Antropogenic CO2 emissions and sinks (2005‐2014) 3,4 Pg/yr 16 Pg/yr Deforestation 33 Pg/yr + 44% 10,9 Pg/yr C sequestration 30% 9,5 Pg/yr 26% Source: CDIAC; NOAA‐ESRL; Houghton et al 2012; Giglio et al 2013; Le Quéré et al 2015; Global Carbon Budget 2015 3 Soil carbon sequestration Kätterer, 2011 2 1/5/2017 Time scale of C sequestration Long‐term agricultural field experiments – indispensable for quantifying management effects on soil properties • About 50 experiments > 20 years • The oldest were started 1936 • Focus on organic amendments, fertilization, cropping systems, crop rotations, tillage • Valuable for model calibration/validation 5 Soil C % (0-20cm) Ultuna frame trial Example: Ultuna frame trial 4 M I O K J 3 N G L 2 H F 1 E C 0 1955 D B 1975 1995 2015A 3 1/5/2017 Soil inventories: I (1988‐97), II (2001‐07), III (2010‐17) C% in soil 2015 2 3 4 Swedish inventories of agricultural soils 2.4 Mton CO2/year Rel. Increase ley area Sweden average 3 4 C% in soil 1995 30% 40% 50% Ley % of agr. area Kol % i marken C% in topsoil 2,4 2,5 2,6 2,7 2 Rel. Increase horse poplulation 1980 2000 2020 Poeplau et al. 2015 Biogeosciences 12: 3241–3251 Swedish case study: Land use change effects on soil C Topsoil C (Mg ha-1) 3 adjacent fields, Kungsängen, Sweden Grassland ΔC= n.s. 90 80 70 60 ΔC=30% 75 yrs‐1 ΔC=0.4 Mg C ha‐1 yr‐1 Arable since1860 50 40 1930 ΔC= n.s. 1950 1970 1990 Arable 18601970, grassland thereafter 2010 Kätterer et al. 2008. Nutr. Cycl. Agroecosys. 81:145–155 4 1/5/2017 Frequency of annual crops vs. perennial leys affecting SOC (Bolinder et al. 2010, AGEE 38: 335–342; Bolinder et al., 2012, Can J. Soil Sci. 92: 821‐833) 3 LTEs in Northern Sweden 6 year rotations: ley and annual crops Soil organic C% (0-20 cm) 5 5 yrs ley 3 yrs ley 2 yrs ley 1 yr ley 4,5 4 3,5 3 2,5 ∆SOC: 0.4 – 0.8 Mg ha‐1 yr‐1 2 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 Cover crops and strips with perennial vegetation for reduced N leaching and for C sequestration Results from long‐term experiments: 1.1 Mg CO2 ha‐1 yr‐1 with cover crop (Poeplau et al., 2015. Geoderma Regional 4: 126–133) Photo: Gunnar Torstensson. Timothy and English Ryegrass 5 1/5/2017 Effect of N fertilization on soil carbon Topsoil C% 3 2,5 Topsoil C after 50 years, Soil fertility exp., 2 N0 1,5 1 N3 0,5 0 16 long‐term experiments >40 years In average 1 kg higher SOC for each kg N fertilizer Kätterer et al., 2012. Acta Agric. Scand. 62, 181‐198 Low yields (e.g. organic farming) ‐> deforestation ‐> lower soil carbon stocks Arable land is a limiting resource Intensive production Extensive production Bioeconomy Forest/Nature Soil C Forest/Nature Soil C Sustainable intensification is mandatory for providing food for a growing human population 6 1/5/2017 Soil conservation in Iceland Restauration of degraded grassland resulted in soil sequestration of 0.6 Mg C /ha /year in average during 50 years (Arnalds et al., 2000) Most drained organic soils are emitting GHG but they are fertile. If set aside – food has to be produced somehwere else Örjan Berglund 2 m subsidence during 90 years (Bälinge, Sweden) 7 1/5/2017 Drained organic soils 800 Cultivated Set aside 600 CO2 400 200 2 -2 FCO (g m ) Cultivated 0 -200 -400 -600 jan jul jan 2012 jul Set aside jul jan 2014 jul jan 2015 jul jan 2016 CH4 uptake > 200 kg CO2eq yr‐1 0 -5 -2 FCH (g m ) jan 2013 4 -10 -15 -20 -25 maj sep jan maj sep jan maj 2012 - 2014 Reduced tillage or deep ploughing? In average no effect of reduced tillage on SOC in 25 experiments > 10 years (Meurer et al., manuscript) RT‐CT (0‐30 cm); n=25 Δ SOC (Mg ha‐1) 10 5 0 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 ‐5 ‐10 Effect probably climate dependent Deep ploughing (1m deep) in Germany • 42% higher SOC stocks after 45 years • 15% lower C% in topsoil – potential for more sequestration. Alcantara et al., GCB 2016 8 1/5/2017 Future prospects: Plant breeding – perennial wheat Jerry Glover (Land Institute, Kansas) Roots of wheat and “intermediate wheatgrass” Glover et al. 2010. AGEE 137: 3–12 Summary: It is possible to increase soil carbon stocks • Plant cover as long as possible (perennials, cover crops, agroforestry etc.) • Reclamation of eroded land • High production per area increases soil carbon and reduces deforestation • Avoid drainage of organic soils • Plant breeding – perennial wheat? • The IPCC‐method accounts only for emissions. The huge fixation of CO2 accomplished by agriculture should also be considered. 9 1/5/2017 Agriculture in the North • Few alternatives to dairy and meat production in northern parts of Scandinavia and Finland • High standards for animal welfare, EU:s lowest use of antibiotics • More moose than dairy cows in Sweden • Sweden is importing > 50% of its food (often produced with higher climate footprint) • Agricultural area is decreasing – emissions occur somewhere else • Food security is becoming a political issue • Semi‐natural grassland are hotspots of biodiversity • Good natural conditions for expansion of agriculture and soil carbon storage Thanks for your attention! Photo: G. Börjesson Foto: M Gerentz 10