Giving Compass' Take:
- Environmental News Network reports on a new approach to making soil carbon estimates more accurate and efficient.
- What is the role of soil carbon estimates in climate mitigation? How can agriculture adapt to be more climate-friendly?
- Read about carbon farming.
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Earth’s soil contains large stocks of carbon — even more carbon than in the atmosphere. A significant portion of this soil carbon is in organic form (carbon bound to carbon), called soil organic carbon (SOC). However, SOC has historically been greatly diminished by agricultural activity, releasing that carbon into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, contributing to climate change.
To monitor and sustainably manage SOC stocks under agricultural land use, an accurate way to measure SOC is essential. However, current methods of accurately estimating SOC are resource- and cost-intensive. In their new study, published in Geoderma, Agroecosystem Sustainability Center (ASC) researchers tested a new sampling method in hopes of improving the ability to estimate SOC stocks.
Read the full article about soil carbon estimates at Environmental News Network.