Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Instagram
    • español
    • English
  • Contacto
  •  
    • español
    • English
  • Mi Cuenta
Acerca deAutoresTítulosTemasColeccionesComunidades☰
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Ver ítem 
    xmlui.general.dspace_homeCentros e Institutos de InvestigaciónCIRN. Centro de Investigaciones de Recursos NaturalesInstituto de Recursos BiológicosArtículos científicosxmlui.ArtifactBrowser.ItemViewer.trail
  • Inicio
  • Centros e Institutos de Investigación
  • CIRN. Centro de Investigaciones de Recursos Naturales
  • Instituto de Recursos Biológicos
  • Artículos científicos
  • Ver ítem

Carbon emissions from agricultural expansion and intensification in the Chaco

Resumen
Carbon emissions from land‐use changes in tropical dry forest systems are poorly understood, although they are likely globally significant. The South American Chaco has recently emerged as a hot spot of agricultural expansion and intensification, as cattle ranching and soybean cultivation expand into forests, and as soybean cultivation replaces grazing lands. Still, our knowledge of the rates and spatial patterns of these land‐use changes and how they [ver mas...]
Carbon emissions from land‐use changes in tropical dry forest systems are poorly understood, although they are likely globally significant. The South American Chaco has recently emerged as a hot spot of agricultural expansion and intensification, as cattle ranching and soybean cultivation expand into forests, and as soybean cultivation replaces grazing lands. Still, our knowledge of the rates and spatial patterns of these land‐use changes and how they affected carbon emissions remains partial. We used the Landsat satellite image archive to reconstruct land‐use change over the past 30 years and applied a carbon bookkeeping model to quantify how these changes affected carbon budgets. Between 1985 and 2013, more than 142 000 km2 of the Chaco's forests, equaling 20% of all forest, was replaced by croplands (38.9%) or grazing lands (61.1%). Of those grazing lands that existed in 1985, about 40% were subsequently converted to cropland. These land‐use changes resulted in substantial carbon emissions, totaling 824 Tg C between 1985 and 2013, and 46.2 Tg C for 2013 alone. The majority of these emissions came from forest‐to‐grazing‐land conversions (68%), but post‐deforestation land‐use change triggered an additional 52.6 Tg C. Although tropical dry forests are less carbon‐dense than moist tropical forests, carbon emissions from land‐use change in the Chaco were similar in magnitude to those from other major tropical deforestation frontiers. Our study thus highlights the urgent need for an improved monitoring of the often overlooked tropical dry forests and savannas, and more broadly speaking the value of the Landsat image archive for quantifying carbon fluxes from land change. [Cerrar]
Thumbnail
Autor
Baumann, Matthias;   Gasparri, Néstor Ignacio;   Piquer Rodriguez, María;   Gavier Pizarro, Gregorio Ignacio;   Griffiths, Patrick;   Hostert, Patrick;   Kuemmerle, Tobias;  
Fuente
Global Change Biology 23 (5) : 1902-1916 (May 2017)
Fecha
2017-05
Editorial
Wiley
ISSN
1354-1013
1365-2486
URI
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/gcb.13521
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/4220
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13521
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Carbono; Carbon; Utilización de la Tierra; Land Use; Agricultura; Agriculture; Intensificación; Intensification; Ecosistema; Ecosystems; Expansión Agrícola; Región Chaqueña;
Derechos de acceso
Restringido
Descargar
Compartir
  • Compartir
    Facebook Email Twitter Mendeley
Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítem