Global Ecology
Carbon and Changes in Land Use
Woods Hole Research Center studies show that for the years 1850 to 2005 about 156 PgC were released to the atmosphere as a result of changes in land use, 90% from forests either logged or converted to other uses, the rest largely from cultivation of prairie soils (one Pg [petagram]=1015 grams=one billion metric tonnes). The total loss of carbon from terrestrial ecosystems was 165 PgC, but about 15 PgC accumulated in wood products (e.g., buildings, furniture, paper, etc.). The net increment in these wood products is the difference between harvests (about 235 PgC) and oxidation of products (about 220 PgC) over this 155-year period. Conversion of natural ecosystems to croplands and pastures was responsible for net releases to the atmosphere of 107 and 21 PgC, respectively. The net effect of logging and regrowth was to release about 23 PgC. The annual rate at which carbon was released to the atmosphere generally increased over the period 1850 to 2005 as rates of deforestation increased [Figure 1].
For the years 2000-2008 the net release of carbon from changes in land use averaged 1.5±0.7 PgC/yr. The net flux of 1.5 PgC from changes in land use was the difference between a release of 4.5 PgC from oxidation of dead vegetation, soil organic matter, and wood products and an uptake by regrowing ecosystems of about 3.0 PgC/yr). For the years 2000-2008, the global carbon cycle can be summarized as follows. (Units are PgC):
Atmospheric increase |
= |
Emissions from fossil fuels |
+ |
Net emissions from changes in land use |
- |
Oceanic uptake |
- |
Residual carbon sink |
4.1(±0.04) |
= |
7.7 (±0.4) |
+ |
1.5 (±0.7) |
- |
2.3 (±0.4) |
- |
2.8 (±0.9) |
Related Projects
- Pan-tropical Forest Cover Mapped with Cloud-Free Radar Imaging
- Pan-tropical Forest Carbon Mapped with Satellite and Field Observations
- Building the Global Rivers Observatory
- Fire and Carbon Sequestration in Boreal North America
- Understanding the Forest Carbon Cycle in Harvard Forest
- Studying Carbon Sequestration in Howland Forest
- Distribution of Above-Ground Biomass in the Tropical Region of Africa
- National Biomass and Carbon Dataset







