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4 Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon in Agriculture, Forest, and Peatland Ecosystems across Canada J.S. Bhatti Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Northern Forestry Centre, Edmonton, AB, Canada C. Tarnocai Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Research Branch (ECORC), Ottawa, ON, Canada Carbon is exchanged between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere through photosynthesis, respiration, decomposition, and combustion, which could be net sources or sinks. This source or sink status is not a static ecosystem characteristic, however, but can shift over time as a result of changes in the physical, chemical, or biological processes within these systems (Kauppi et al., 2001). Consequently, changes in climate will result in modifications to the C fluxes of both natural and managed ecosystems throughout Canada. Therefore, there is a strong need to quantify these fluxes in relation to various changes resulting from alternate management options. Quantifying these fluxes can be challenging because of difficulties inherent in detecting very small changes relative to the large total C pools. When studying C stocks and fluxes in agriculture, forest, and peatland ecosystems, it is often helpful to consider the C stored in the basic components of biomass and soil (Fig. 4–1). Following this structured approach, it is then important to understand the factors able to affect changes in C fluxes from different pools, and to identify the key factors that determine whether these pools function as sinks or sources of C. The objective of this chapter is to illustrate the influence of climate change on the C pools in managed ecosystems across Canada. Specifically, the ecosystems considered are agricultural environments, forests, and peatlands. Much of the focus of discussion is on the interaction between different C pools, under changing climatic conditions, with specific reference to C fluxes in the three managed ecosystems. The need for the intense management of Canadian peatlands–wetlands, forests, and agricultural ecosystems is increasing to fulfill the requirements of food, livestock feed, fiber, and fuel production. Soil Carbon Sequestration and the Greenhouse Effect, 2nd edition. SSSA Special Publication 57. Copyright © 2009. ASA‒CSSA‒SSSA, 677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711, USA. 47 48 Bhatti & Tarnocai Fig. 4–1. Components of the different managed ecosystems’ carbon stocks. (Modified from Lal, 2005.) Carbon Stocks in Relation to Canadian Terrestrial Ecosystems Agricultural Ecosystems Due to climatic and soil limitations, only 7% of Canada’s landmass is under agriculture (Natural Resources Canada, 2004) and contains about 9.36 Pg of soil organic carbon (SOC). This is estimated to represent 6% of the total organic C pool in all agricultural soils worldwide (Tarnocai and Lacelle, 1996). Large amounts of organic matter occur in Chernozemic soils, formed in grassland ecosystems, and in Luvisolic soils, formed in clay-rich regions, both of which are common throughout the prairies. The total soil C content is estimated at 4.6 to 16.4 kg m−2 for Chernozems, and between 5.3 and 7.8 kg m−2 for Luvisols (Anderson and Coleman, 1985). Tarnocai (1998) reported the average soil C content of 12.4 kg m−2 for Chernozemic soils and 9.3 kg m−2 for Luvisols (Table 4–1). Soils common to eastern Canada, such as Gleysols (soils formed under conditions of poor drainage) and Podzols (acidic soils formed under coniferous forests), also have relatively large amounts of organic matter but do not make up a large proportion of agricultural land in Canada. Organic soils (those found in bogs, fens, and some swamps and marshes) contain the greatest amount of organic matter but occupy only a small area of Canada’s agricultural region. Forest Ecosystems Approximately half of the total Canadian landmass (410 Mha) is covered by forest (Natural Resources Canada, 2004), with boreal forests as the dominant forest type, spanning the entire width of the country. Distribution of different ecozones in Canada is presented in Plate 4–1 (see color image section). The C pool Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 49 Table 4–1. Amount of soil organic carbon in various soil orders of Canada. (Data modified from Tarnocai, 1998.) Soil classification U.S. Canadian Inceptisol Boroll Gelisol Aqua suborders Boralf, Udalf Histosol Spodosol Entisol Mollisol, Alfisol Total Brunisol Chernozem Cryosol Gleysol Luvisol Organic Podzol Regosol Solonetz Soil C content Surface† Total‡ —— kg m−2 —— 5.2 9.3 7.4 12.4 11.3 40.6 11.7 20 4.9 9.3 18.7 133.7 9.9 19.3 5.6 11.8 5.8 11.5 Soil C pool Surface† Total‡ —— Pg —— 6.1 10.9 3.2 5.4 28.7 102.7 2.7 4.6 3 5.6 14.9 106.3 12.5 24.4 0.8 1.7 0.3 0.6 72.2 262.3 † 0–30 cm depth. ‡ 0–100 cm depth for mineral soils; total depth for organic soils (peat deposits). in Canadian forests (excluding peat deposits) was estimated at 86.6 Pg C in 1989, of which 71.7 Pg occurred in the dead organic matter in litter and soils, and 14.9 Pg in the living biomass (Apps et al., 1999). Carbon density (kilograms C per hectare) in Canadian forest ecosystems varies greatly among regions, reflecting the differences in growing conditions and species. The Forest Ecosystem C Database (FECD) compiled by Shaw et al. (2005) estimated the mean total ecosystem C for the different terrestrial ecozones in Canada (Table 4–2). Estimates of average total ecosystem C in Canadian ecozones range from 11.3 kg m−2 in the Western Taiga Shield to 48.7 kg m−2 in the Pacific Maritime. In general, at the terrestrial ecozone level, mineral soils account for 40 to 80% of total ecosystem C, while tree biomass and organic soil horizons account for 15 to 40% and 2 to 25% of total ecosystem C, Table 4–2. Distribution of total ecosystem carbon among tree biomass, soil organic horizon, and mineral horizon in Canadian terrestrial ecozones. (Data compiled from Shaw et al., 2005.) Terrestrial ecozone Western Taiga Shield Western Boreal Shield Hudson Plains Boreal Plains Taiga Plains Montane Cordillera Eastern Boreal Shield Mixwood Plains Atlantic Maritime Pacific Maritime C content Organic Mineral Tree biomass Total horizon horizon ——————————— kg m−2 ——————————— 4.21 2.26 4.83 11.30 3.50 5.54 13.74 22.75 3.58 2.55 17.20 23.33 10.17 4.23 9.35 23.74 8.83 6.31 12.24 27.40 9.48 2.85 17.53 29.87 6.03 3.74 21.28 31.04 9.85 1.10 28.20 39.20 7.85 3.76 30.60 42.20 7.05 3.87 38.70 48.70 50 Bhatti & Tarnocai respectively. Live tree biomass ranges from 3.5 kg m−2 in the Western Boreal Shield to 10.2 kg m−2 in the Boreal Plains. Carbon estimates for mineral soil horizons range from 4.8 kg m−2 in the Western Taiga Shield to 38.7 kg m−2 in the Pacific Maritime ecozones (Table 4–2). Soils Since about 75% of Canada’s landscape is under tundra and boreal ecosystems, a large proportion of the global soil C pool occurs in Canadian soils (Tarnocai and Lacelle, 1996). The Organic soil order has the highest average C content followed by Cryosols, with the remaining soil orders containing much lower amounts (Table 4–1). It is estimated that 84.3% (205 Pg) of the organic C pool in Canadian soils occurs in mid to high latitudes, where two major soil orders are Cryosols (103 Pg) and Organic soils (106 Pg). The other soil orders with their respective C pools are Podzols (17 Pg), Brunisols (10 Pg), Luvisols (5 Pg), Gleysols (4 Pg), Regosols (1 Pg), Chernozems (1 Pg), and Solonetz (<1 Pg) (Tarnocai, 1998). Wetland–Peatland Ecosystems Canada contains the world’s second (after Russia) largest area of peatlands (114 Mha), which cover approximately 13% of the Canadian land area and 16% of the soil area (Environment Canada, 1986). The majority of wetlands (96%) occur in the Boreal (72 Mha) and Subarctic (37 Mha) regions. The dominant peatland types are bogs (67%) and fens (32%), while swamps and marshes together account for less than 1% of Canadian wetlands. The western boreal forests of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba, along with British Columbia, contain approximately 40% of Canada’s peatland area, while eastern Canada (Ontario eastward) contains about 37%, and northern Canada (the three territories) approximately 23% (National Wetlands Working Group, 1988). Across Canada, peatlands are estimated to store 103 to 184 Pg C (Apps et al., 1993). Tarnocai et al. (2005) estimate that the organic C pool of Canadian peatlands is 147 Pg, of which 67% occurs in the Boreal and 30% in the Subarctic regions. Together, these two peatland regions contain 97% of the organic C pool of all Canadian peatlands. Soils in the permafrost region of Canada contain about 75% (197 Pg) of the total SOC (Table 4–3) in North America (Tarnocai et al., 2007). Although mineral soils in the permafrost region occupy a larger area than the peatlands, the organic soils contain approximately 57% (112 Pg) of the region’s total soil organic soil pool. In continental western Canada (Alberta, Saskatchewan, Table 4–3. Organic carbon mass in peatlands (organic soils) and mineral soils in various permafrost zones in Canada. (Data compiled from Tarnocai et al., 2007.) Permafrost zones Continuous Discontinuous Sporadic Isolated patches Total Carbon pool† Organic soils Mineral soils Total ——————————— Pg ——————————— 21.82 51.1 72.92 26.54 10.33 36.86 30.66 9.15 39.81 32.95 13.59 46.54 111.97 84.17 196.14 † Calculated to the total depth of the peat deposit. Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 51 and Manitoba), peatlands contain 48 Pg C, with 42 Pg C stored as peat, and 6 Pg C as living, aboveground biomass (Vitt et al., 2000). Carbon Exchange A terrestrial ecosystem can be either a sink or a source of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). The ecosystem is a sink when photosynthesis results in a net increase in the vegetation C pool, which may subsequently enrich the soil C pool via input of vegetation-derived biomass. The ecosystem is a source when processes, such as decomposition and fire, release C to the atmosphere in excess of that fixed by photosynthesizing vegetation. The net C balance of the ecosystem is estimated as the net change of ecosystem C pool over time: Net Carbon Balance = dCecosys dt−1 where Cecosys is the sum of C pool in vegetation, detritus, and soil. Ignoring, for the moment, any export of organic C from the ecosystem, the net C balance is identical to the net ecosystem productivity (NEP): dCecosys dt−1 = NEP = GPP − R where GPP (gross primary production) is the rate of CO2 uptake through photosynthesis, and R is the total ecosystem respiration flux comprising autotrophic (plant) respiration Ra and heterotrophic respiration R h (decomposition) of the accumulated detritus and soil pools. R = Ra + R h The net accumulation of C in the ecosystem is, thus, a summation over time of the difference between a large incoming CO2 flux (GPP) and a nearly equal outgoing flux (R). Fluxes are controlled by different processes whose rates change over time and space and vary both with environmental conditions and the type of ecosystem. These processes include those regulating the internal redistribution of organic C within the ecosystem (e.g., allocation of photosynthate within the plants and breakdown of fresh litter into less decomposable forms of soil organic matter) and disturbances (e.g., land use changes, soil degradation, erosion, windthrow, insect predation, harvest, or fire). Agricultural Ecosystems In agricultural soils, increasing C sequestration is an important strategy for reducing the net emission of CO2 into the atmosphere while restoring degraded soils, improving soil and water quality, and increasing agronomic productivity and farm income. The amount of C stored in agricultural soils can be increased in two ways: (i) by increasing the quantity of plant C added to the soil or (ii) by suppressing the rate at which soil organic matter decomposes. Soil C sequestration can be achieved through adoption of conservation tillage based on crop residue mulch and use of cover crops, increasing use efficiency of nitrogenous fertilizers and organic amendments, erosion management, and restoration of degraded soils. These practices increase the rate of biomass C input and decrease losses from erosion and mineralization (Janzen, 1998). Several important mechanisms protect SOC and include physical, chemical, and biological processes (Laird et al., 2001; Six et al., 2002). The combined effect of no-tillage on C sequestration has been estimated by Liang et al. (2005), who reported that, under continuous 52 Bhatti & Tarnocai cropping, the soil C pool increased by 0.22 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 for Brown, 0.32 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 for Dark Brown, 0.39 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 for Black, and 0.30 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 for Dark Gray Chernozemic soils with no-tillage. Forest Ecosystems Changes in the climate regime also affect current forest C pools, although the direction and magnitude of these changes is still uncertain and difficult to predict because of the complex interactions between component species in different forest ecosystems. Over a period of time, from years to decades, the stimulation of GPP through longer growing seasons may result in increased forest vegetation biomass, an effect that may already be apparent in the global atmospheric CO2 record (Keeling and Whorf, 2005). Although GPP may increase with increasing mean annual temperature, so may the heterotrophic decomposition rate, which approximately doubles with every 10°C increase in soil temperature. The very large size of the C pool in forest litter and soils is the cause of concerns that increased heterotrophic respiration may generate a positive feedback mechanism by releasing additional quantities of CO2 to the atmosphere. However, in some ecosystems, increased heterotrophic respiration may be largely offset by increased detrital production from trees (Lavigne et al., 2003). Thus, the detrital and soil C pool would be relatively unchanged as long as the forest composition remains unchanged. On the basis of published data for the boreal forests of the United States, Canada, Finland, Sweden, and China, Gower et al. (1997) calculated an average net primary production (NPPA) of 3.6 and 1.4 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 for deciduous and coniferous boreal forests, respectively. These values are relatively consistent with field measurements, as well as average belowground NPPA values of 1.1 and 1.0 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 calculated for deciduous and coniferous boreal forests, respectively (Gower et al., 1997). Total aboveground and belowground net primary production (NPPT) has also been estimated from field measurements in the United States, Canada, Finland, Sweden, and China to be 4.7 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 for deciduous, broadleaved species, and 2.7 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 for coniferous species (Gower et al., 1997). These estimated NPPT values are comparable to the total NPP simulated using the C budget model of the Canadian Forest Sector (CBM-CFS2). Simulated CBM NPP values for western Canada vary between 1.5 and 3.9 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 depending on the ecozone, forest type, stand age, and site productivity (Li et al., 2003). The majority of boreal forest sites investigated sequester C (measured as NEP) at annual rates of up to 2.5 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 (Black et al., 1996; Jarvis et al., 1997; Chen et al., 1999). The values depend primarily on latitude, soil type, forest type, and successional stage. The NEP measurements made over periods of up to 5 yr in the northern Canada BOREAS experiment (Sellers et al., 1997) show that a few old-growth coniferous stands may be C neutral (Goulden et al., 1998) and in warm and cloudy years can be a C source with a loss rate of up to 1.0 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 (Lindroth et al., 1998). Wetland–Peatland Ecosystems Carbon accumulation in peatlands represents the balance between aboveand belowground net primary production and decomposition in both the upper, aerobic (acrotelm) and the underlying, anaerobic (catotelm) peat layers. In general, peatlands have much lower productivity than other natural ecosystems (Vitt, 2006), Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 53 and peat accumulation is controlled by cool, wet conditions that limit decomposition (Moore et al., 1998). Regional rates of C accumulation in Canadian peatlands range from 0.14 to 0.28 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 (Gorham, 1991; Mäkilä, 1997; Vitt et al., 2000) and vary with changes in soil moisture, soil temperature, reduction–oxidation conditions (Reader and Stewart, 1972), acidity and alkalinity (Thormann et al., 1999), species composition (Johnson and Damman, 1991), and litter quality (Updegraff et al., 1995; Yavitt et al., 1997). Campbell et al. (2000b) compiled the NPP data for fens and bogs of continental western Canada (Table 4–4) and reported that the Table 4–4. Biomass and net primary productivity of different vegetation in continental western Canadian wetlands. (Compiled from Campbell et al., 2000b.) Trees Shrubs Herbs Moss Total Biomass ———————————— g m−2 ———————————— N/A† 1511 ± 1767 1411 –‡ – 1471 ± 1458 N/A 253 ± 191 316 558 – 358 ± 299 N/A 45 78 128 365 ± 458 142 ± 118 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 1768 ± 1408 1860 372 ± 245 295 1198 ± 1562 5456 ± 3049 – – 5456 ± 3049 351 ± 765 1023 – 800 ± 523 77 492 ± 683 N/A 650 ± 523 N/A N/A N/A N/A 654 ± 197 2483 ± 916 843 ± 380 2291 ± 2330 Wetland type Peatlands Permafrost bogs Bogs Forested fen Nonforested fens Open fen Fens and bogs Non-peataccumulating Treed swamps No-treed swamps Marsh Swamps and marshes Net Primary Productivity ——————————— g m−2 yr−1 ——————————— Peatlands Permafrost bogs Bogs 77 106 ± 192 – 247 ± 104 – 13 44 – – 88 ± 68 108 63 – 255 ± 296 34 125 365 ± 458 166 ± 298 542 ± 279 – – 542 ± 279 31 ± 29 481 ± 260 – 255 ± 296 62 727 ± 667 999 ± 529 820 ± 592 Forested fen Nonforested fens Open fen Fens and Bogs Non-peataccumulating Treed swamps No-treed swamps Marsh Swamps and marshes † N/A, not available. ‡ –, not in this wetland type. 24 190 ± 157 81 118 163 139 ± 298 – – – – 176 449 ± 215 358 263 268 ± 142 337 ± 142 654 ± 197 1232 ± 405 1034 ± 156 924 ± 463 54 Bhatti & Tarnocai total a NPP is 5.1 Mg ha−1 yr−1, comprising 3.4 Mg ha−1 yr−1 for aboveground and 1.7 Mg ha−1 yr−1 for belowground components. In comparison, marshes and swamps have higher total NPP (Table 4–4). Joosten and Clarke (2002) reported that pristine fens presently remove 2.5 Mg ha−1 yr−1 (as CO2) and release 2.97 Mg ha−1 yr−1 (as CH4), while bogs currently remove 3.1 Mg ha−1 yr−1 and release 0.53 Mg ha−1 yr−1. While these trends indicate that pristine fens act as a C source and bogs as a C sink, total sequestration of 5.6 Mg ha−1 yr−1 and release of 3.5 Mg ha−1 yr−1 indicates that peatlands are a net C sink. A little information is available about the C fluxes in both unfrozen and frozen mineral soils in the permafrost regions. Trumbore and Harden (1997) reported a C sequestration rate of 60 to 100 g C m−2 yr−1 for an unfrozen, upland, mineral soil in northern Manitoba, due to slow rate of decomposition. Robinson et al. (2003) observed that, in the sporadic discontinuous permafrost zone, mean C sequestration rates were 88.6 and 78.5 g C m−2 yr−1 for unfrozen bog and frost mound soils, respectively. However, the rate of C sequestration in frozen peat plateau soils was 13.31 g C m−2 yr−1. Tarnocai et al. (2007) estimated that the peatlands in the permafrost region of Canada sequester 18 Tg C yr−1. In permafrost soils, cryogenic processes are responsible for moving the organic matter from the surface layers into the deeper soil layers, resulting in long-term storage of C in Cryosols. Understanding the ability of terrestrial ecosystems to adapt to environmental change requires fundamental knowledge of numerous ecological processes. The changes considered here include not only climatic change, but also land use changes and alterations in disturbance patterns that may, or may not, be brought about by the changing climate. Ecological responses to climate change are complex and nonlinear, with the variables involved being strongly interactive and nonindependent. Climate change affects both the distribution and character of the landscape through changes in temperature, precipitation, and natural disturbance patterns. These impacts are not entirely separable from the effects of other anthropogenic changes such as land use change, soil degradation, erosion, and drainage, all of which may be exacerbated by climate change. The following sections deal with the impacts of climate change and other disturbances on ecosystems and the effects that these agents of change may have on the ecosystem C storage. Impacts of Climate Change Under present conditions, climate has a major influence on the year-to-year variations in agricultural productivity (Gitay et al., 2001; Lal, 2006). Increasing atmospheric concentration of CO2 may enhance plant growth in some crops, but the increase may be limited by the lack of water and essential elements (e.g., N, P, S, and some micronutrients) (Oren et al., 2001). The positive impacts of warmer temperature and enhanced CO2 on the rates of crop maturation and production are expected to mitigate the impact of moisture limitation, so that increased growth rates in grasslands and pastures are generally expected (Campbell et al., 2000a). However, agronomic and biomass productivity may decline under climate change because of increases in intensity and frequency of drought, reduction in nutrient use efficiency, and increase in the incidence of pests and diseases. With a doubling of CO2 concentrations, an average increase of about 17% in grassland productivity is anticipated, with relatively more increases in the northern than southern regions (Campbell et al., 2002). However, some studies suggest that Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 55 under projected climate change scenarios, particularly with extreme weather events, the invasion of alien species into grasslands could reduce the nutritional quality of the grass (White et al., 2001). Farm-level adaptation, including new crop strains, can generally offset the detrimental effects of climate change, but poor soil conditions may be a major factor limiting the northward expansion of agricultural crops (Campbell et al., 2005). Northward expansion of agricultural land use, due to climate warming, may depend primarily on the availability of suitable soils and climatic conditions. The most favorable soil conditions for agriculture occur in the Yukon Territory and the Mackenzie River Valley of the Northwest Territories. Tarnocai et al. (1988) evaluated the effect of climate warming on agriculture in three areas of the Yukon Territory (Watson Lake, Whitehorse, and Dawson City) and observed that a significant moisture deficit would develop as a result of higher rates of evapotranspiration, leading to the replacement of the present thermal limitation by a moisture limitation of equal severity. Irrigation would remove this limitation, resulting in much more favorable growing conditions in these areas, especially in the vicinity of Dawson City, where the long daylight hours would further improve the growing conditions. Brklacich and Tarnocai (1991) reported that similar limitations of moisture availability may also apply to the Mackenzie River Valley. They concluded that, in the Central and Upper Mackenzie River Valley, there would be sufficient warming, but the moisture deficit would impose considerable restrictions on agriculture unless irrigation is available. However, in the Lower Mackenzie Valley (Mackenzie Delta), climate warming would not be sufficient to support commercial agriculture. The projected changes in climate are expected to have some adverse impacts on Canadian soils. These impacts may be described in relation to their effects on the components of ecosystem C stocks and are outlined in Fig. 4–1. Increases in soil temperatures may enhance the rate of decomposition of soil organic matter. Consequently, the soil organic matter pool may decline with adverse impacts on soil structure, plant-available water retention capacity, and nutrient cycling. More specifically, and with all other factors remaining the same, a lowering of soil organic matter content may have severe adverse impacts on soil quality, leading to (i) increase in susceptibility to crusting, compaction, and erosion; (ii) decrease in available water-holding capacity; (iii) reduction in activity and species diversity of soil fauna; (iv) decline in use efficiency of water and nutrients, (v) reduction in agronomic productivity; and (vi) decrease in probability of achieving sustainable use of soil and water resources (Lal, 2006). However, the impact of projected climate change on soil quality may differ among regions, with more adverse impacts on soils of higher than lower latitudes. Climate also affects the distribution, health, and productivity of the forest and has a strong influence on the disturbance regime. Realization of potential increases in plant productivity because of climate change depends on a range of factors including species changes and competitive interactions, water and nutrient availability, and the effect of temperature increase on photosynthesis and respiration (Bauer et al., 2006). Already notable changes in forest growth have been attributed to climate-related drivers such as increased CO2 concentration, higher temperatures, greater water stress, changing nutrient loadings, and permafrost thaw (Apps et al., 2006). The scientific knowledge on the effects of these drivers is limited. However, Hogg et al. (2005) observed that increased drought 56 Bhatti & Tarnocai stress may result in the boreal region, becoming a long-term source of atmospheric CO2. Other studies suggest that warmer and drier conditions projected for midcontinental Canada may result in greater losses of boreal regions in the south (due to grassland and agricultural encroachment) than gains in the north (due to forest migration into present tundra), which would lead to a net reduction in the C pool (Apps et al., 1993). Projected climate change scenarios for the boreal forest generally predict warmer and somewhat drier conditions, with the disturbance patterns also expected to change (Amiro et al., 2001). In general, Canadian temperatures have been increasing steadily over the last 50 yr, with winter temperatures being above normal between 1985 and 2005. Concurrently, winter precipitation has shown a general decline across Canada. The greatest warming has occurred in western Canada, with up to 6°C increase in the mean daily minimum temperature (Environment Canada, 2006). In addition, the frequency of days with extreme temperatures, both high and low, is expected to increase, snow and ice cover to decrease, and heavy precipitation events to increase (Folland et al., 2001). Higher temperatures may result in higher evaporation rates; hence, soils in some boreal regions are expected to be drier during the summer (Amiro et al., 2001). In addition to the direct influence of climate change, other variables, such as anthropogenic and natural disturbances, also have profound influences on forest distribution and productivity. The future forest C balance may largely depend on the type and frequency of disturbances, changes in species composition, and alterations in the nutrient and moisture regimes under changing climate conditions (Apps et al., 2006). In the shorter term (the next 100 yr), it is likely that climate change may be accompanied by an increase in natural disturbances (fire, insects, disease, windthrow) that can reduce the forest C pool by releasing large quantities of CO2 to the atmosphere (Fig. 4–2). Since approximately 1970, Canada’s forests have been subjected to increases in natural and anthropogenic disturbances (Kurz et al., 1998). Changes in the disturbance regime have resulted in a change in Canada’s forest ecosystems; the net C sink (about 225 Tg C yr−1) for the period 1920 to 1970 became a small net C source (about 75 Tg C yr−1) by 1989 (Kurz and Apps, 1999). Similarly, Bond-Lamberty et al. (2007) reported that the C balance of Canadian boreal forest was driven by changes in fire disturbance between 1948 and 2005. Recent analysis performed for Canadian managed forests between 1990 and 2005 shows that the managed forest in Canada was an overall sink except during 5 yr when it was a source mainly due to emission resulting from extensive forest fires (Fig. 4–3) (Environment Canada, 2007). The mountain pine beetle has killed trees over 10 million ha in central British Columbia between 1999 and 2005, resulting in significant increase (W.A. Kurz and Canadian Forest Service–Carbon Accounting Team, Victoria, personal communications, 2007) in emissions over the last few years (Fig. 4–2). Climate change affected the variability, but not the mean, of the landscape C balance, with precipitation exerting a more significant effect than temperature. While regeneration of the disturbed forest may sequester some of this C, it is not known if the increased C uptake of the younger forest (the spatial structure and growth characteristics of which are determined by the altered climatic and environmental conditions) may equal the C losses of the forest it replaced (Apps et al., 1993). Slow rates of decomposition in peatlands result in the rapid build up of organic matter. However, with climate change and the predicted increase in fire Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 57 Fig. 4–2. Canadian managed forest area disturbed by fire, insect, and harvest between 1990 and 2005. (Data compiled by Kurz and CFS-CAT team, personal communication.) Fig. 4–3. Carbon source–sink for Canadian managed forest between 1990 and 2005. 58 Bhatti & Tarnocai activities in peatlands, most of the surface C pool may be depleted (Turetsky et al., 2007). The average fire return frequency for western Canadian forested peatlands is between 400 and 1700 yr (Kuhry, 1994). Published rates of organic matter combustion (vegetation and soil) in peatlands average 3.2 ± 0.4 kg C m−2 per fire event (Turetsky and Wieder, 2001; Turetsky et al., 2002). Using this average combustion rate, Turetsky et al. (2004) estimated that up to 5.9 Tg C is released annually to the atmosphere as a result of peatland burning in continental western Canada. Using the peatland sensitivity model developed by Kettles and Tarnocai (1999), Tarnocai (2006) determined the effect of climate warming on the various peatland regions. He found that the greatest effect is likely to occur in the Subarctic Region, where approximately 78% of the organic C mass may be severely or extremely affected by climate change. The second-largest effect is expected to occur in the Boreal Region, where approximately 41% of the organic C mass may be severely or extremely affected by climate change. Further, approximately 97% of the SOC pool of Canadian peatlands is contained in these two regions. Permafrost is an important component of many northern forest–peatland ecosystems and has profound influences on hydrology, vegetation, and C storage. Warming of temperatures has resulted in increased permafrost melt in northern regions of Canada. For example, air temperatures have warmed significantly in the Mackenzie Valley (ranging from 60 to 64 oN) over the past five decades (Robinson et al., 2001). The projected warming and associated changes in precipitation influence both NPP and decomposition in peatlands. Recent thawing in southern portions of the discontinuous permafrost zone has also been noted at boreal sites in Manitoba (Thie, 1974) and other prairie provinces (Beilman et al., 2001). In boreal forests, permafrost affects soil moisture by inhibiting permeability and providing a continuous source of water to the ecosystem as the permafrost surface thaws during the growing season. Soils with shallow permafrost may be particularly sensitive to climate change because of the limiting role that high soil moisture plays in these ecosystems. For example, shifts toward wetter or cooler conditions may suppress fires and enhance ecosystem C storage. Shifts toward drier summers may favor fire activity and enhance fire-induced emissions. While these climatic trends apply to all ecosystems, forest ecosystems with permafrost soils are at much greater risk. In years that favor deep thawing, fire can tap into these vast quantities of C-rich fuels (Harden et al., 2000). Peatland fires result in an initial ecosystem response of decreased NPP and elevated postfire decomposition rates, but little is known about the longer-term recovery of peatland C balance after a fire event (Zoltai et al., 1998). Land Use Change Rapid expansion of agriculture along its southern border has been a recognized risk to the boreal forest for more than 50 yr (Davidson, 1998). The conversion of native upland and lowland into agriculture and urban lands has escalated, resulting in the contemporary patchwork of ecosystem types (Houghton, 2000). In the prairie provinces of Canada alone, it has been estimated that there was a net deforestation of 12.5 million ha (Mha) between 1869 and 1992 (Ramankutty and Foley, 1999). Using the Canadian Land Inventory Database to estimate changes between 1966 and 1994, Hobbs and Theobald (2001) estimated that forests of the southern boreal plains of Saskatchewan declined from 1.8 Mha Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 59 to 1.35 Mha, an overall conversion of 24% of the boreal transition zone to agriculture over the 28-yr period. Other studies have shown that forest land is being converted into agriculture, industrial, and urban development at the rate of 1215 ha yr−1 along the southern boreal zone of Canada (Fitzsimmons, 2002). This rate is approximately three times the world average: the loss of boreal forests and wetlands is equal to, and in some regions greater than, that occurring in tropical rainforests. These estimates suggest that with the current rate of conversion, all the wetland and forested areas in the boreal transitional zone will be lost by 2050 unless purposeful action is taken to reverse the present trend. Conversion from forest ecosystem to agriculture and urban land uses results in losses of C through both the initial depletion, associated with the removal of natural vegetation, and the subsequent losses from soil, through mineralization, erosion, and leaching (Lal, 2003a). Most agricultural soils in North America have lost 30 to 50% (30–40 Mg C ha−1) of the antecedent C pool following conversion from natural to agricultural ecosystems (Lal, 2006). In addition to removal of natural vegetation cover, agricultural activities also deplete the soil C pool through reduction of biomass inputs and cause changes in soil temperature and moisture regimes, which further accelerate decomposition. Soil drainage, aimed at managing the water table, and soil cultivation, intended to control weeds and prepare seed beds, also accelerate soil erosion and mineralization of the SOC pool. The above discussion has focused on CO2, but similar conclusions can be drawn for other greenhouse gases such as CH4 and N2O. For example, N2O emissions are influenced by the rate, type, and timing of fertilizer applications. Changes in land use also alter the uptake of CH4 by soils, and different agricultural practices differ in their CH4 emission profiles (Moss et al., 2005). Increases in livestock populations have also contributed to the increase in atmospheric CH4. Enteric fermentation, the digestion process in ruminant animals such as cattle, sheep, and goats, adds an estimated 100 Pg of CH4 yr −1 to the atmosphere (Boadi et al., 2004). Land Degradation Land degradation can occur through either degradation of the vegetation cover or the underlying soil but, ultimately, results in reduced C storage of both ecosystem components. Degradation of soil occurs as a result of excessive and inappropriate utilization, environmental changes, and/or careless management of agricultural, pasture, or forest lands. Soil degradation may be physical, chemical, or biological (Fig. 4–4) and can range in severity from vegetation cover reduction to drastic soil erosion. These degradation processes adversely affect NPP, both directly and indirectly, which, in turn, reduces the amount of biomass input into the soil. Consequently, the C input to the soil system is lower than output from the system, resulting in depletion of the pool which becomes an atmospheric source. Biological (as opposed to physical or chemical) soil degradation is directly related to depletion of the SOC pool, which also leads to a reduction in soil biodiversity. The process of soil degradation leads to a positive feedback because of the interactions among different processes involved, so that, once triggered, the degradation may accelerate over time in both magnitude and rate (Lal, 2006). Consequently, most degraded soils are severely depleted of their SOC pool (Lal et al., 2003a,b). The historic loss of the SOC pool in degraded soils and ecosystems, however, has created soil C sink capacity. Thus, restoration of degraded soils and 60 Bhatti & Tarnocai Fig. 4–4. Soil degradation effects on the soil carbon pool. SOM, soil organic matter. (Modified from Lal, 2006.) ecosystems provides an opportunity to sequester some of the atmospheric CO2 into the depleted SOC pool. Land use change associated with a loss of vegetation typically has an initial rapid loss of C and nutrients that is generally ascribed directly to the land use change itself. However, land use change may result in a long-term ecosystem degradation that generates additional depletion of the SOC pool. The loss of belowground C is especially significant because this loss can be much more rapid than the rate of its formation or replacement (Lal, 2006); these pools are usually regarded as long-term storage. Since almost 40% of the world land area is designated as drylands, and 70% of this area is being subjected to land use change, the magnitude of degradation processes associated with land use change is very important (Lal, 2003b). Soil degradation is also an important factor in the C balance in the Tundra Region. Given the recent trends of increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration and the attendant climate warming, a number of questions become relevant when considering these degraded lands. Is there a CO2 fertilization effect on degraded lands? If antidesertification or land management measures are taken, will the C pool attain the antecedent values, or will changed atmospheric and climate conditions result in higher or lower equilibrium ecosystem C pools? Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 61 Soil degradation may also occur on forested lands due to various operations and activities including harvesting, wildfire, fire control, pest and disease outbreaks, and conversion to nonforest uses, particularly agriculture and pasture land. These disturbances often cause forests to become sources of CO2 (NEP < 0) because the rate of NPP is exceeded by total respiration or oxidation of plants, soil, and dead organic matter (International Geosphere–Biosphere Programme, 1998). Intermediate between uplands and wetlands lie the riparian zones, which are commonly degraded through cultivation or overgrazing. Degradation of the sensitive riparian zones not only has the direct impact of reducing the amount of vegetated habitat available to sequester C, but also has a negative impact on the adjacent wetland through nutrient loading. Healthy riparian vegetation functions to slow runoff from adjacent agricultural lands, trapping sediments, associated pesticides, and fertilizers in the riparian zone, thus preventing nutrient loading and contamination of adjacent wetlands or aquatic systems. Soil Erosion Among major land uses in Canada, soil erosion is most extensive and severe in agricultural regions (Bhatti et al., 2006). Soil erosion reduces agricultural productivity and sustainability as well as having adverse effects on air and water quality (Lal, 2006). Wind and water erosion may increase significantly in agricultural soils due to increases in extreme weather conditions such as heavy precipitation and prolonged droughts (Lal, 2003a). Warmer winters may decrease snow cover, and the consequential reduced soil moisture content further increases the wind erosion risks during spring. Water erosion hazard occurs in all provinces, wind erosion in the prairie provinces (Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba), and tillage erosion on most of the cropland under conventional management practices. Soil erosion depletes the SOC pool through preferential removal of soil organic material comprising the light soil fraction in the surface horizon. Consequently, the SOC pool of eroded soils is severely depleted, often by as much as 30 to 45 Mg C ha−1 (Lal, 2003b). The fate of C displaced by erosion is an obviously important, but highly debated, topic. Lal (2003b) estimated that on the global scale, water erosion translocates about 4.0 to 6.0 Pg C yr−1. Of this, 2.8 to 4.2 Pg C yr−1 is redistributed over the landscape and transferred to local depressional areas, 0.4 to 0.6 Pg C yr−1 is transported into the ocean by world rivers, and 0.8 to 1.2 Pg C yr−1 is emitted to the atmosphere as CO2. Thus, an adoption of effective conservation measures can drastically reduce the erosion-induced emission of soil C into the atmosphere. A recent analysis of Canadian soil erosion risk assessments by Van Vliet et al. (2003) indicates that changes in cropping systems and tillage practices have significantly reduced the risk of erosion between 1981 and 1996. The combination of reduced tillage, less-intensive cropping, decreased summer fallow, and removal of marginal land from production have resulted in lower erosion rates. Techniques used to reduce the rate of erosion also have a large potential to be used in the sequestration of C, which may then offset a fraction of the anthropogenic emissions. Suggested cropping practices that may restore some of the depleted SOC pool in eroded agricultural soils include reduction in tillage, growing of perennial forage cover, and application of organic amendments to the soil. An almost 70% increase in the total C pool has been observed in the Canadian Prairies over a 5-yr period, with continuous legume and cereal production, reduced 62 Bhatti & Tarnocai tillage, and nutrient additions via fertilization or composted manure applications (Duchemin et al., 1995). Drainage and Flooding In the Canadian prairie and parkland regions, wetland drainage is still a current practice, although the major peat deposits lie further north in the boreal forest. Approximately 17% of farmers whose lands supported wetlands drained one or more of these between 1990 and 1992 (Canadian Wetlands Conservation Task Force, 1993). Drainage of wetlands has serious consequences because it fundamentally changes the habitat by lowering the water table and altering both the processes of photosynthesis (C uptake) and decomposition (C release). In Canada, agriculture alone has accounted for an estimated loss of 20 Mha of the presettlement wetlands (Lal, 2003b). The emission of CO2 increases when northern peatlands are drained or degraded (Alm et al., 1999). It has been suggested that draining an additional 5% of Canadian peatlands would be sufficient to offset the putative existing peatland C sink of the country (Waddington et al., 2002). Draining of peatlands also significantly increases N2O emissions (Regina et al., 1998). In western Canada, most drained peatlands are only marginally productive under crop management (Environment Canada, 1986). The loss of SOC from such wetlands when converted to agricultural usage may be as much as 50% (Schlesinger, 1997). Conversely, the flooding of forest and wetland areas in the boreal zone for hydroelectric reservoirs generates massive fluxes of dissolved organic C into the water, accelerates peat decomposition, and increases CH4 and CO2 fluxes to the atmosphere (Munn and Maarouf, 1997). For example, Kelly et al. (1997) experimentally flooded a boreal wetland in Ontario, causing the C dynamics of the site to change from a sink of 6.6 g C m−2 yr−1 to a source of 130 g C m−2 yr−1. Turetsky et al. (2002) estimated that 0.8 ± 0.2 Gt C yr−1 is released from peatlands occupying approximately 780 km2 within hydroelectric reservoirs across western boreal Canada. Mitigation Options for Different Ecosystems As discussed previously, mitigation strategies promoting the preservation and maintenance of healthy terrestrial ecosystem functioning may be as valuable as land management strategies that aim to enhance the net uptake, and decrease the releases of CO2 from terrestrial ecosystems. Logically, the amount of soil C stored in agriculture ecosystems can be increased in two ways: first, by increasing the input of biomass to the soil and, second, by reducing soil respiration rates. Adoption of many practices increases the soil C pool in agricultural ecosystems. These practices include reducing the tillage intensity, maximizing the return of crop residues, using improved agronomic practices to enhance crop yield, using forage crops in rotation, encouraging vegetation cover on cultivated land, discouraging soil degradation practices, and improving water management practices (Janzen, 2005). However, this gain in the soil C pool can only continue for a short period of time before the system reaches a new equilibrium state (West and Post, 2002). The management practices to enhance SOC sequestration in agricultural soils include increasing the cycle time of C in plant materials and soil organic matter by reducing tillage, taking full advantage of the growing season to produce more shoot and root biomass by including perennial forages in the crop rotation, Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 63 increasing the use of fertilizer to enhance biomass production, and growing forage varieties selected for yield and root mass production (Anderson and Coleman, 1985). In addition, Canada has more than 7 Mha of surplus agricultural land, a significant portion of which can be brought into production for establishing biomass crops. Such crops are typically fast-growing perennials and can produce lignocellulosic biomass at two to four times the average C sequestration rate in soils of Canada’s current food crops. Assuming 7 Mha producing lignocellulosic biomass at a conservative 3 Mg C ha−1 yr−1, there would be an annual biomass C stream of more than 20 Tg C (Layzell and Stephen, 2006). Much of the focus on C sequestration in forest ecosystems has been on enhancement of the aboveground biomass. Recently, a shift to more comprehensive ecosystem management appears to be taking place, together with renewed interest in rehabilitating degraded lands, mitigating the effects of deforestation, and enhancing numerous ecosystem services such as wildlife, water quality, elemental cycling, and so on. In the forest ecosystem, Binkley et al. (1998) outlined 12 strategies to increase the C pool in managed forests such as those of Canada. These strategies involve actions such as reducing the loss to fire, insects, and similar disturbances (a short-term benefit only), increasing forest productivity (e.g., through silvicultural practices such as fertilizing), improving regeneration immediately following disturbance or harvesting, and choosing the appropriate mix of species to plant (Table 4–5). By planting forests where none previously Table 4–5. Classes of management activities, subjective assessment of short- (<10 yr) and long-term (>10 yr) benefits. (Compiled from Binkley et al., 1998, and Apps et al., 2006.) Activities Increase forest area Afforestation and reforestation Establish and manage reserves Multiple use (e.g., agroforestry, shelterbelts) Restoration of degraded lands Urban forestry Increase carbon density Longer rotation length Enhance tree productivity Control stand density (thinning) Enhance nutrient availability Control water table Selected species and genotypes Protect from natural disturbance, reduce risk Reduced impact logging Reduce regeneration delay Manage on site logging residues Vulnerable to climate change/human activity‡ Short-term† (>25 yr) Longerterm† ++ + + −− – + ++ + − − Va Vc ++ + −? ++ + + +++ − Va, Vc Va, Vc Vc Va Vc Vc Va, Vc ? + + − − −− −− Vc, Va Vc, Va + Va + Vc, Va † Number of plus signs (minus signs) indicates expected magnitude of C benefit (decrement). ‡ Vc, expected to be vulnerable to climate change; Va, potentially vulnerable to changes in human activity. 64 Bhatti & Tarnocai existed (afforestation) or where previous land management practices had led to degraded cover (reforestation), the total C pool is generally increased. Nutrient fertilization has long been used to enhance stand productivity, and it can result in increased C pools in trees and soils (Nohrstedt, 2001). Since the success of nutrient fertilization depends on site conditions, it is, therefore, potentially susceptible to rapid climate changes that may drastically alter these conditions. For example, on more fertile sites the effect of fertilization is reduced by limited supply of nutrients (Saarsalmi and Malkonen, 2001). Planting fast-growing species, such as hybrid poplar, can produce high rates of C accumulation over short periods of time. However, for long-term C sequestration, planting species adapted to the local climate may be more effective (Schroeder and Kort, 2001). Since approximately two-thirds of the ecosystem C, especially in the boreal and subarctic forests, is stored in the soil (Tarnocai, 1998) forest management practices must be based on minimal soil disturbance. Soil disturbances, such as by erosion initiated by logging and road construction, as well as the thawing of ice-rich permafrost, create favorable conditions for decomposition of soil organic matter and the attendant release of CO2 to the atmosphere (Tarnocai et al., 2007). Peatlands, and their ability to sequester C, are very sensitive to natural and anthropogenic disturbances, including wildfire, road construction, drainage, peat harvesting, and overburden removal from any form of open pit mining, including oil-sands (Turetsky and St. Louis, 2006). Consequences of peatland disturbance may be direct, where the disturbance itself removes C from the peatland, or indirect, through reduced photosynthesis or increased decomposition. Decomposition, through the process of microbial respiration, converts previously stored C to CO2, CH4, and/or N2O, which are then released in to the atmosphere. In general, the peatland disturbances described above all cause current C sequestration to be either reduced or eliminated (Turetsky and St. Louis, 2006). Protection of C pools from intensifying and recurring disturbance events, solely as a mitigation strategy, is likely neither efficient nor effective as a long-term measure (Vitt and Wieder, 2006). Conclusions This chapter focuses on a key question: Will the present C source–sink relationships of several different ecosystems, namely agriculture, forest, and wetland–peatland, be maintained in Canada? More specifically, will the presently observed C pools contained within these ecosystems decrease over time, or can they be maintained or possibly increased over the next 50 to 100 years? To answer these questions, a reliable projection of the C budget for 50 to 100 yr into the future is needed. However, such predictions are difficult to make with certainty, given the present state of knowledge. With current knowledge and data, it is possible to predict the likely trends in C balances for these ecosystems (i.e., whether there will be increase or decrease in the relative size of different components of the terrestrial ecosystems) so that a general C budget trend can be projected. Based on the above discussions, the following trends appear to be likely: • Carbon loss from land use or land cover change from forest and wetland– peatland systems to agriculture is likely to increase, given the sustained increase in food and fiber demand over the next 50 yr. Influence of Climate and Land Use Change on Carbon... 65 • The emission of CO2 from the soils (agricultural and forest) as climate warms will become an increasingly important source through the 21st century. • Risks of soil erosion and other degradation processes, with attendant emission of CO2 and other greenhouse gases, are likely to increase with increase in population pressure and warming climate. ·· In some locales, the greenhouse gases emissions may be offset by increased productivity due to improved growing conditions. Methane emissions from wetlands and peatlands are expected to decrease in southern regions, but these greenhouse gas emission reductions may to some extent be offset by an increase in emission of CO2. Moreover, there may be an increase in CH4 emissions in northern regions because of increase in temperature, lengthening of growing seasons, and thawing of permafrost. Since forests and agricultural ecosystems continue to provide both the goods (e.g., food and fiber) and ecosystem services (e.g., recreation, spiritual, and social) of interest to humans, there is an urgent need to assess the impact of anthropogenic activities on the C pool of these ecosystems. Management activities that enhance or protect C pools in forest ecosystems include reducing the regeneration delay through seeding and planting, enhancing forest productivity, changing the harvest rotation length, using forest products judiciously, and protecting forests through control and suppression of disturbance by fire, pests, and disease. At the same time, the flow of material goods and services from a thriving forest products sector not only reduces the dependence on more energy-intensive products (e.g., cement), but also provides economic benefits that can help pay for such forest-enhancing activities. 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