Authors
Keith Paustian, Sarah Collier, Jeff Baldock, Rachel Burgess, Jeff Creque, Marcia DeLonge, Jennifer Dungait, Ben Ellert, Stefan Frank, Tom Goddard, Bram Govaerts, Mike Grundy, Mark Henning, R César Izaurralde, Mikuláš Madaras, Brian McConkey, Elizabeth Porzig, Charles Rice, Ross Searle, Nathaniel Seavy, Rastislav Skalsky, William Mulhern, Molly Jahn
Publication date
2019/11/2
Source
Carbon Management
Volume
10
Issue
6
Pages
567-587
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
The importance of building/maintaining soil carbon, for soil health and CO2 mitigation, is of increasing interest to a wide audience, including policymakers, NGOs and land managers. Integral to any approaches to promote carbon sequestering practices in managed soils are reliable, accurate and cost-effective means to quantify soil C stock changes and forecast soil C responses to different management, climate and edaphic conditions. While technology to accurately measure soil C concentrations and stocks has been in use for decades, many challenges to routine, cost-effective soil C quantification remain, including large spatial variability, low signal-to-noise and often high cost and standardization issues for direct measurement with destructive sampling. Models, empirical and process-based, may provide a cost-effective and practical means for soil C quantification to support C sequestration policies. Examples …
Total citations
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