Key questions and uncertainties associated with the assessment of the cropland greenhouse gas balance: The carbon balance of European croplands

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors

The geographic spread of croplands, together with the diversity of crops and management practices, and the largely seasonally-restricted cycle of crop production, complicates a detailed assessment of the cropland carbon or greenhouse gas balance at the European/continental scale. Whilst the major components that contribute to the carbon budget at the ecosystem scale have been identified, a number of additional factors/parameters remain to be quantified, such as a more detailed assessment of both the direct and indirect impacts of volatile organic carbon production. In addition, there are various ways in which improved estimates of the carbon balance might be achieved, some of which are largely specific to croplands, whilst others are of more general relevance. These include a more detailed examination of dissolved organic as well as inorganic carbon fluxes, more extensive measurements of non-carbon greenhouse gases, such as methane and nitrous oxide, and their fluxes between the atmosphere and the soil, rather than just focussing on losses, and improved measurement protocols, particularly the partitioning of heterotrophic and autotrophic respiration. In addition, there is a need for improved spatial resolution, either through more intensive sampling and/or the employment and development of new technology that can be used for making continuous measurements over larger areas of land. Relatively straightforward assessments of the inputs and losses associated with harvests and the use of organic fertilizers are also required. The quantitative significance of fires is also unclear, with a potential complexity of interactions with soil and atmospheric processes that are not reflected in current assessments. Finally, a more comprehensive coverage of the dominant crops/cropping systems are required before we can say that the budgets are truly reflective of the major European cropland ecosystems.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftAgriculture, Ecosystems and Environment
Jahrgang139
Ausgabenummer3
Seiten (von - bis)293-301
Anzahl der Seiten9
ISSN0167-8809
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 15.11.2010
Extern publiziertJa

    Fachgebiete

  • Ökosystemforschung - Carbon/greenhouse gas budgets, Component fluxes, Cropland diversity, Missing values, Uncertainties

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Tapping Environmental Accounting Potentials of Beer Brewing
  2. Learning Novel Skills From Iconic Gestures
  3. Popförderung in der Stadt
  4. Akzeptanz und Nutzung der FDS-Methoden durch die Fachkräfte
  5. Политика-как-вещь vs политика-как-структура
  6. Depicting Women in Brazilian Social Realism: A Transnational and Computational Analysis
  7. Bewegte Sprache
  8. Foundations of Management & Entrepreneurship
  9. Positive intercropping effects on biomass production are species-specific and involve rhizosphere enzyme activities
  10. The health consequences of child mental health problems and parenting styles
  11. An Asia-centric approach to team innovation
  12. Ästhetik der Reorganisation. Zur Einleitung
  13. Bildschirmtext (Btx)
  14. Ladwig, Bernd (2020): Politische Philosophie der Tierrechte
  15. Environmental heterogeneity drives fine-scale species assembly and functional diversity of annual plants in a semi-arid environment
  16. Affective States and Risky Driving Behavior of Novice and Young Drivers
  17. Herbert Marcuse and the West German Student Movement
  18. Risk adjustment in health insurance and its long-term effectiveness
  19. Decreasing Organizational Size
  20. Kindliches Schweigen oder taube Institutionen?
  21. Was bewirken sprachliche Variationen von Aufgabenkontexten für das Schreiben von argumentativen Schülertexten?
  22. Sustainable human resource management and job satisfaction—Unlocking the power of organizational identification
  23. New Social Movements and Smaller Parties
  24. The role of past interactions in great apes' communication about absent entities
  25. The elephant in the room