articleScienceJun 10, 2004Closed access

Soil Carbon Sequestration Impacts on Global Climate Change and Food Security

The Ohio State University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

The carbon sink capacity of the world's agricultural and degraded soils is 50 to 66% of the historic carbon loss of 42 to 78 gigatons of carbon. The rate of soil organic carbon sequestration with adoption of recommended technologies depends on soil texture and structure, rainfall, temperature, farming system, and soil management. Strategies to increase the soil carbon pool include soil restoration and woodland regeneration, no-till farming, cover crops, nutrient management, manuring and sludge application, improved grazing, water conservation and harvesting, efficient irrigation, agroforestry practices, and growing energy crops on spare lands. An increase of 1 ton of soil carbon pool of degraded cropland soils…

Citation impact

8,036
total citations
FWCI
78.23
Percentile
100%
References
36
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Environmental science
  • Carbon sequestration
  • Soil carbon
  • No-till farming
  • Agronomy
  • Soil water
  • Greenhouse gas
  • Soil biodiversity
No related works found for this paper.