A
new database on the world’s soils improves knowledge of the current and
future land productivity as well as the present carbon storage and
carbon sequestration potential of the world’s soils. It helps to
identify land and water limitations, and assist in assessing the risks
of land degradation, particularly soil erosion risks, said FAO this
week. Derived from the soil database, FAO has produced a global Carbon
Gap Map that allows for the identification of areas where soil carbon
storage is greatest and the physical potential for billions of tons of
additional carbon to be sequestrated in degraded soils.
Soil information has often been the one missing information layer,
the absence of which has added to the uncertainties of predicting the
potential for and constraints to food and fibre production as well as
the capacity of soils to hold carbon and to act as a sink.
Until now, most efforts to use agriculture to manage greenhouse
gases have involved above-ground sequestration, primarily through
planting trees, since the amount of carbon that can be sequestered in
this way is substantial. However, there is also growing interest in
finding ways to increase carbon sequestration in soils. Soils are
presumed to be the largest carbon reservoir of the terrestrial carbon
cycle, although estimates of their magnitude vary widely. Soil can be a
source or a sink for green house gases depending on land use
management. For long-term sequestration, organic carbon must be stored
in forms and in locations in the soil profile with slow turnover.
“The chemical and physical properties of soils also help to
determine specific information about how well a soil will perform as a
filter of wastes, as a home to organisms, as a location for buildings
and as pool for carbon. The more information we have about soil
properties, the more we can evaluate the quality of our natural
resources all over the world and their potential to produce food now
and in future scenarios of climate change” said Alexander Muller, FAO
Assistant Director General for Natural Resources and Environment
Management.
“Soil characterization data are a key piece of the picture of how an
ecosystem work,” said Freddy Nachtergaele, FAO soil expert. “Soil
properties also tell us whether the soil has the potential to store
enough water to keep plants growing through a drought or to withstand a
flood. Farmers’ knowledge of soil properties also forms the basis of
managing fertilizer application efficiently thus reducing avoidable
nutrient losses to the environment.”
Land Potential Assessment
FAO and the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
combined recent regional and national updates of soil information
worldwide and incorporated the FAO-UNESCO Soil Map of the World into a
new Harmonized World Soil Database (HWSD). Other partners such as The
European Soil Bureau Network; the Institute of Soil Science of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences and ISRIC World Soils contributed
significantly to the information.
Soils as carbon stores
Different soils have different capacities to act as a store for
carbon which has direct implications for capturing greenhouse gases.
The world's soils hold more organic carbon (1500 Gt) than the
atmosphere that contains about half this amount as CO2 (720 Gt), and
the vegetation (600 Gt) combined. Thus, relatively small changes in the
flow of carbon into or out of soils have significant effect on a global
scale. In addition to predicting the effect of changing rainfall
patterns under climate change scenarios, scientists require information
on soil moisture storage capacities which are provided by this
database.
The HWSD provides improved soil information worldwide particularly
needed in the context of the Climate Change Convention and post Kyoto
Protocol instruments for soil carbon measurements and carbon trading.
It can also be used by agronomists, farm experts and scientists in
planning the sustainable development of agricultural production and
will improve land degradation assessments, environmental impact studies
and sustainable land management options.
The database will also serve to guide policies aimed at addressing
land competition issues concerning food, energy and biodiversity.
Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations