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Carbon Fluxes on North American Rangelands
Author
Svejcar, Tony
Angell, Raymond
Bradford, James A.
Dugas, William
Emmerich, William
Frank, Albert B.
Gilmanov, Tagir
Haferkamp, Marshall
Johnson, Douglas A.
Mayeux, Herman
Mielnick, Pat
Morgan, Jack
Saliendra, Nicanor Z.
Schuman, Gerald E.
Sims, Phillip L.
Snyder, Kereith
Publisher
Rangeland Ecology Management
Publication Year
2008
Body

Rangelands account for almost half of the earth’s land surface and may play an important role in the global carbon (C) cycle. We studied net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of C on eight North American rangeland sites over a 6-yr period. Management practices and disturbance regimes can influence NEE; for consistency, we compared ungrazed and undisturbed rangelands including four Great Plains sites from Texas to North Dakota, two Southwestern hot desert sites in New Mexico and Arizona, and two Northwestern sagebrush steppe sites in Idaho and Oregon. We used the Bowen ratio-energy balance system for continuous measurements of energy, water vapor, and carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes at each study site during the measurement period (1996 to 2001 for most sites). Data were processed and screened using standardized procedures, which facilitated across-location comparisons. Although almost any site could be either a sink or source for C depending on yearly weather patterns, five of the eight native rangelands typically were sinks for atmospheric CO2 during the study period. Both sagebrush steppe sites were sinks and three of four Great Plains grasslands were sinks, but the two Southwest hot desert sites were sources of C on an annual basis. Most rangelands were characterized by short periods of high C uptake (2 mo to 3 mo) and long periods of C balance or small respiratory losses of C. Weather patterns during the measurement period strongly influenced conclusions about NEE on any given rangeland site. Droughts tended to limit periods of high C uptake and thus cause even the most productive sites to become sources of C on an annual basis. Our results show that native rangelands are a potentially important terrestrial sink for atmospheric CO2, and maintaining the period of active C uptake will be critical if we are to manage rangelands for C sequestration.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
61
Journal Pages
465-474
Collection
Rangelands West
Journal Name
Rangeland Ecol Manag
Keywords
North America
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