Rangeland Ecology & Management

Get reliable science

Soil carbon sequestration in sub-Saharan Africa : a review
Author
Vagen, T G
Lal, R
Singh, B R
Publisher
Land Degradation & Development
Publication Year
2005
Body

Restoration of degraded soils is a development strategy to reduce desertification, soil erosion and environmental degradation, and alleviate chronic food shortages with great potential in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Further, it has the potential to provide terrestrial sinks of carbon (C) and reduce the rate of enrichment of atmospheric CO2. Soil organic carbon (SOC) contents decrease by 0 to 63 percent following deforestation. There exists a high potential for increasing SOC through establishment of natural or improved fallow systems (agroforestry) with attainable rates of C sequestration in the range of 0·1 to 5·3MgCha-1yr-1. Biomass burning significantly reduces SOC in the upper few centimeters of soil, but has little impact below 10 to 20 cm depth. The timing of burning is also important, and periods with large amounts of biomass available generally have the largest losses of SOC. In cultivated areas, the addition of manure in combination with crop residues and no-till show similar rates of attainable C sequestration (0 to 0·36MgCha-1yr-1). Attainable rates of SOC sequestration on permanent cropland in SSA under improved cultivation systems (e.g. no-till) range from 0·2 to 1·5TgCyr-1, while attainable rates under fallow systems are 0·4 to 18·5TgCyr-1. Fallow systems generally have the highest potential for SOC sequestration in SSA with rates up to 28·5TgCyr-1. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
16
Journal Number
1
Journal Pages
53-71
Journal Name
Land Degradation & Development
Keywords
soil organic matter
soil degradation
global warming
soil restoration
agroforestry
farming systems
ecoregions
Sub-Saharan Africa
carbon sequestration in soil
soil organic carbon
carbon sequestration
climate change
restoration ecology
degradation
Soil Condition
desertification
erosion
carbon dioxide
fire ecology
agriculture
management
Africa