Prescribed burn of grassland

Planting trees and suppressing wildfires do not necessarily maximise the carbon storage of natural ecosystems. A new study has found that prescribed burning can actually lock in or increase carbon in the soils of temperate forests, savannahs and grasslands.

When managed properly, fire can be good - both for maintaining biodiversity and for carbon storage

Adam Pellegrini

探花直播finding points to a new method of manipulating the world鈥檚 natural capacity for carbon capture and storage, which can also help to maintain natural ecosystem processes. 探花直播results are .

鈥淯sing controlled burns in forests to mitigate future wildfire severity is a relatively well-known process. But we鈥檝e found that in ecosystems including temperate forests, savannahs and grasslands, fire can stabilise or even increase soil carbon,鈥 said Dr Adam Pellegrini in the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Plant Sciences, first author of the report.

He added: 鈥淢ost of the fires in natural ecosystems around the globe are controlled burns, so we should see this as an opportunity. Humans are manipulating a process, so we may as well figure out how to manipulate it to maximise carbon storage in the soil.鈥澨

Fire burns plant matter and organic layers within the soil, and in severe wildfires this leads to erosion and leaching of carbon. It can take years or even decades for lost soil carbon to re-accumulate. But the researchers say that fires can also cause other transformations within soils that can offset these immediate carbon losses, and may stabilise ecosystem carbon.

Fire stabilises carbon within the soil in several ways. It creates charcoal, which is very resistant to decomposition, and forms 鈥榓ggregates鈥 鈥 physical clumps of soil that can protect carbon-rich organic matter at the centre. Fire can also increase the amount of carbon bound tightly to minerals in the soil.

鈥淓cosystems can store huge amounts of carbon when the frequency and intensity of fires is just right. It鈥檚 all about the balance of carbon going into soils from dead plant biomass, and carbon going out of soils from decomposition, erosion, and leaching,鈥 said Pellegrini.听

When fires are too frequent or intense - as is often the case in densely planted forests - they burn all the dead plant material that would otherwise decompose and release carbon into the soil. High-intensity fires can also destabilise the soil, breaking off carbon-based organic matter from minerals and killing soil bacteria and fungi.听

Without fire, soil carbon is recycled - organic matter from plants is consumed by microbes and released as carbon dioxide or methane. But infrequent, cooler fires can increase the retention of soil carbon through the formation of charcoal and soil aggregates that protect from decomposition.

探花直播scientists say that ecosystems can also be managed to increase the amount of carbon stored in their soils. Much of the carbon in grasslands is stored below-ground, in the roots of the plants. Controlled burning, which helps encourage grass growth, can increase root biomass and therefore increase the amount of carbon stored.

鈥淚n considering how ecosystems should be managed to capture and store carbon from the atmosphere, fire is often seen as a bad thing. We hope this new study will show that when managed properly, fire can also be good - both for maintaining biodiversity and for carbon storage,鈥 said Pellegrini.听

探花直播study focused on carbon stored in topsoils, defined as those less than 30cm deep. More carbon is stored in the world鈥檚 soil than in the global vegetation and the atmosphere combined. Natural fires occur in most ecosystems worldwide, making fire an important process in global carbon cycling.听

This research was funded by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation.听

Reference
Pellegrini, AFA.et al: 鈥樷, Nature Geoscience, December 2021. DOI 10.1038/s41561-021-00867-1

Read more about Adam Pellegrini's research

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