Literature DB >> 33421219

Estimating the carbon storage potential and greenhouse gas emissions of French arable cropland using high-resolution modeling.

Camille Launay1,2, Julie Constantin1, Florent Chlebowski3, Sabine Houot4, Anne-Isabelle Graux5, Katja Klumpp6, Raphaël Martin6, Bruno Mary3, Sylvain Pellerin7, Olivier Therond8.   

Abstract

Many studies have assessed the potential of agricultural practices to sequester carbon (C). A comprehensive evaluation of impacts of agricultural practices requires not only considering C storage but also direct and indirect emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG) and their side effects (e.g., on the water cycle or agricultural production). We used a high-resolution modeling approach with the Simulateur mulTIdisciplinaire pour les Cultures Standard soil-crop model to quantify soil organic C (SOC) storage potential, GHG balance, biomass production and nitrogen- and water-related impacts for all arable land in France for current cropping systems (baseline scenario) and three mitigation scenarios: (i) spatial and temporal expansion of cover crops, (ii) spatial insertion and temporal extension of temporary grasslands (two sub-scenarios) and (iii) improved recycling of organic resources as fertilizer. In the baseline scenario, SOC decreased slightly over 30 years in crop-only rotations but increased significantly in crop/temporary grassland rotations. Results highlighted a strong trade-off between the storage rate per unit area (kg C ha-1  year-1 ) of mitigation scenarios and the areas to which they could be applied. As a result, while the most promising scenario at the field scale was the insertion of temporary grassland (+466 kg C ha-1  year-1 stored to a depth of 0.3 m compared to the baseline, on 0.68 Mha), at the national scale, it was by far the expansion of cover crops (+131 kg C ha-1  year-1 , on 17.62 Mha). Side effects on crop production, water irrigation and nitrogen emissions varied greatly depending on the scenario and production situation. At the national scale, combining the three mitigation scenarios could mitigate GHG emissions of current cropping systems by 54% (-11.2 from the current 20.5 Mt CO2 e year-1 ), but the remaining emissions would still lie far from the objective of C-neutral agriculture.
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  STICS model; cover crops; cropping system; large scale; organic fertilization; temporary grasslands

Year:  2021        PMID: 33421219     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15512

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  1 in total

1.  Achievable agricultural soil carbon sequestration across Europe from country-specific estimates.

Authors:  Leonor Rodrigues; Brieuc Hardy; Bruno Huyghebeart; Julia Fohrafellner; Dario Fornara; Gabriela Barančíková; Teresa G Bárcena; Maarten De Boever; Claudia Di Bene; Dalia Feizienė; Thomas Kätterer; Peter Laszlo; Lilian O'Sullivan; Daria Seitz; Jens Leifeld
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2021-10-06       Impact factor: 13.211

  1 in total

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