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plant diversity and low input biomass for biofuel
by paleorthid 2007-02-05 01:25 soil · environment · co2 · biofuel · research · opinion · science · carbon_sequestration · conservation
http://notexactlyrocketscience.wordpress.com/2007/02/04/opinion-how-biofuels-could-cut-carbon-emissions-produce-energy-a... - cached - mail it - history
The North Dakota Farmers Union has successfully started a national Carbon Credit Program. It allows ag producers and landowners to earn income by storing carbon in their soil through no-till crop production and longterm grass seeding practices. There are also forestry (tree planting) and methane offset (manure digester) contracts. Forestry and methane contracts are available nationwide and have no enrollment date. Soil offset contracts are limited to established enrollment areas. (article includes map). Soil carbon characterization studies are needed to expand the enrollment areas.
by paleorthid 2007-01-05 11:29 agricultural · carbon_sequestration · co2 · environment · carbon_credits
http://transectpoints.blogspot.com/2007/01/carbon-credit-payments-for-us-forest-no.html - cached - mail it - history
The Godfather of Terra Preta, soil scientist Wim Sombroek (1934 - 2003) enjoyed a lifelong fascination with enhanced soil. The importance of plaggen soil in his native Netherlands impressed him at an early age, and early in the 1960's, he recognized in the Amazonian Dark Earths something familiar and precious. Before his passing, he assembled specific soil scientists challenged them to discover the process for making and sustaining a modern equivalent of the bio-char enhanced terra preta, what he termed terra preta nova. A great opportunity in answering Sombroek's challenge lies is surmounting the opacity of mutualistic rhizospheric species to traditional analytical approaches: only 1% of rhizospheric species are cultureable ala petri dish. We don't have a robust body of culture-independent studies against which to compare Terra Preta, so we are doubly challenged to reverse-engineer the phenomenon. Considering Wim Somboek's many noteworthy accomplishments, the perspective of his international leadership, and the late-in-life timing of his challenge, one senses he is pointing us to a mystery fundamental to understanding soil in new and exciting ways. This happens at a time when the soil science profession is in dynamic transition and sorely in need of a unifying vision. Wim Sombroek has given soil scientists a most welcome and worthy quest.
by paleorthid 2007-01-04 13:39 terra_preta · microbiology · research · soil_science · bio-char · carbon_sequestration · innovation
http://transectpoints.blogspot.com/2007/01/sombroeks-challenge-terra-preta-nova.html - cached - mail it - history
Over the course of an eight-year open-top-chamber CO2-enrichment (to twice ambient concentrations) study of a pristine (annually burned) tallgrass prairie north of Manhattan, Kansas, USA, which was composed of a mixture of C3 and C4 species, Williams et al. measured changes in the active, slow and passive pools of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N), with the goal of determining how they were impacted by the doubled atmospheric CO2 concentration of their reasonably long-term experiment.
by paleorthid 2006-02-27 01:11 CO2 · soil · science · climate_change
http://www.co2science.org/scripts/CO2ScienceB2C/articles/V9/N8/B3.jsp - cached - mail it - history
Web site discusses science in support of using grassland to sequester atmospheric carbon.
by paleorthid 2006-02-26 19:11 climate_change · carbon · CO2 · soil · farm · innovation
http://www.amazingcarbon.com/ - cached - mail it - history
Rapid turnover of organic matter leads to a low efficiency of organic fertilizers applied to increase and sequester C in soils of the humid tropics. Charcoal was reported to be responsible for high soil organic matter contents and soil fertility of anthropogenic soils (Terra Preta) found in central Amazonia. Therefore, we reviewed the available information about the physical and chemical properties of charcoal as affected by different combustion procedures, and the effects of its application in agricultural fields on nutrient retention and crop production. Higher nutrient retention and nutrient availability were found after charcoal additions to soil, related to higher exchange capacity, surface area and direct nutrient additions. Higher charring temperatures generally improved exchange properties and surface area of the charcoal. Additionally, charcoal is relatively recalcitrant and can therefore be used as a long-term sink for atmospheric CO2. Several aspects of a charcoal management system remain unclear, such as the role of microorganisms in oxidizing charcoal surfaces and releasing nutrients and the possibilities to improve charcoal properties during production under field conditions. Several research needs were identified, such as field testing of charcoal production in tropical agroecosystems, the investigation of surface properties of the carbonized materials in the soil environment, and the evaluation of the agronomic and economic effectiveness of soil management with charcoal.
by paleorthid 2006-02-25 14:55 terra_preta · bio-char · carbon_sequestration · charcoal_addition_to_soil · edaphology · pedology · nutrient_leaching · soil_amelioration · soil_microbiology · sustainable_landuse
http://www.citeulike.org/user/paleorthid/article/521171 - cached - mail it - history
The Carbon Coalition started out among growers in the Central West Catchment Management Authority's Farm Systems training program in New South Wales and is expanding to cover Australia and other parts of the globe. The Coalition is a not-for-profit organisation that runs like a business, with the express aim of securing a central role for soil carbon in the credit trading schemes emerging around Greenhouse Gas Emissions abatement. Co-convenors are the Kiely family, woolgrowers from Goolma, NSW.
by paleorthid 2006-02-25 01:43 agricultural · soil · carbon · CO2 · climate_change · global_warming · farm
http://carboncoalitionoz.blogspot.com/ - cached - mail it - history
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