DOI: 10.3390/agronomy16131233 ISSN: 2073-4395

Opportunity Mapping for On-Farm Soil Carbon Sequestration at the Landscape Scale

Jonathan Storkey, Cathy L. Thomas, Tim Field, Dan Geerah, Christopher P Vujacic, Stephan M. Haefele

Decades of cultivation and the often exclusive use of mineral fertilisers as a substitute for organic inputs have reduced the soil organic carbon (SOC) content of agricultural soils, meaning they now represent a potential sink for carbon sequestration to mitigate climate change and improve soil function. As well as being a legacy of management, SOC will also be dependent on local scale climate, topography, and soil properties; accounting for this local context is important when benchmarking fields and quantifying the potential for additional carbon sequestration. We developed a landscape-scale methodology, using a handheld infrared device, for baselining SOC stocks in the top 30 cm across a 45,000 ha farm cluster in the UK. The cluster is exploring opportunities for landscape-scale environmental improvement with a focus on natural flood protection and water pollution reduction through conversion of arable land to permanent grassland. We used the baseline data to estimate additional benefits of arable reversion for soil carbon sequestration. Because all the farms in the cluster share the same pedoclimatic conditions, variance in SOC at the field scale could be confidently attributed to differences in soil type and land use. Average SOC stocks in arable and permanent pasture fields were 103.9 and 140.3 Mg C ha−1, respectively. Variance in %SOC was modelled using soil series, sample depth, land use, and clay content, and fields were benchmarked based on deviation from the expected value. The fields with the largest SOC stocks were identified and used as references to predict future potential sequestration. The conversion of arable land to permanent pasture resulted in a predicted average uplift in SOC of 55.0 Mg C ha−1. Our landscape-scale methodology provides robust evidence on current and future carbon stocks for public subsidy schemes and natural capital markets that account for local constraints and opportunities.

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