Post-Soviet cropland abandonment and carbon sequestration in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus

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Standard

Post-Soviet cropland abandonment and carbon sequestration in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. / Schierhorn, Florian; Müller, Daniel; Beringer, Tim; Prishchepov, Alexander; Kuemmerle, Tobias; Balmann, Alfons.

I: Global Biogeochemical Cycles, Bind 27, Nr. 4, 12.2013, s. 1175-1185.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Schierhorn, F, Müller, D, Beringer, T, Prishchepov, A, Kuemmerle, T & Balmann, A 2013, 'Post-Soviet cropland abandonment and carbon sequestration in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus', Global Biogeochemical Cycles, bind 27, nr. 4, s. 1175-1185. https://doi.org/10.1002/2013GB004654

APA

Schierhorn, F., Müller, D., Beringer, T., Prishchepov, A., Kuemmerle, T., & Balmann, A. (2013). Post-Soviet cropland abandonment and carbon sequestration in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 27(4), 1175-1185. https://doi.org/10.1002/2013GB004654

Vancouver

Schierhorn F, Müller D, Beringer T, Prishchepov A, Kuemmerle T, Balmann A. Post-Soviet cropland abandonment and carbon sequestration in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. Global Biogeochemical Cycles. 2013 dec.;27(4):1175-1185. https://doi.org/10.1002/2013GB004654

Author

Schierhorn, Florian ; Müller, Daniel ; Beringer, Tim ; Prishchepov, Alexander ; Kuemmerle, Tobias ; Balmann, Alfons. / Post-Soviet cropland abandonment and carbon sequestration in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus. I: Global Biogeochemical Cycles. 2013 ; Bind 27, Nr. 4. s. 1175-1185.

Bibtex

@article{a0060d6d0b314d34a823b173180f7500,
title = "Post-Soviet cropland abandonment and carbon sequestration in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus",
abstract = "Widespread cropland abandonment occurred after the collapse of socialism across the former Soviet Union, but the rates and spatial patterns of abandoned lands are not well known. As a result, the potential of this region to contribute to global food production and estimates of the carbon sink developing on currently idle lands are highly uncertain. We developed a spatial allocation model that distributes yearly and subnational sown area statistics to the most agriculturally suitable plots. This approach resulted in new, high-resolution (1 km2) annual time series of cropland and abandoned lands in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus from 1990 to 2009. A quantitative validation of the cropland map confirms the reliability of this data set, especially for the most important agricultural areas of the study region. Overall, we found a total of 87 Mha of cropland and 31 Mha of abandoned cropland in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus combined, suggesting that abandonment has been severely underestimated in the past. The abandonment rates were highest in European Russia. Feeding our new map data set into the dynamic vegetation model LPJmL revealed that cropland abandonment resulted in a net carbon sink of 470 TgC for 1990 to 2009. Carbon sequestration was generally slow in the early years after abandonment, but carbon uptake increased significantly after approximately 10 years. Recultivation of older abandoned lands would be associated with high carbon emissions and lead to substantial amounts of carbon not being sequestered in vegetation formations currently developing on idle croplands. Our spatially and temporally explicit cropland abandonment data improve the estimation of trade-offs involved in reclaiming abandoned croplands and thus in increasing agricultural production in this globally important agricultural region.",
keywords = "Carbon sequestration, Food security, Land abandonment, Land use change, Russia, Soviet Union",
author = "Florian Schierhorn and Daniel M{\"u}ller and Tim Beringer and Alexander Prishchepov and Tobias Kuemmerle and Alfons Balmann",
year = "2013",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1002/2013GB004654",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "1175--1185",
journal = "Global Biogeochemical Cycles",
issn = "0886-6236",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Post-Soviet cropland abandonment and carbon sequestration in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus

AU - Schierhorn, Florian

AU - Müller, Daniel

AU - Beringer, Tim

AU - Prishchepov, Alexander

AU - Kuemmerle, Tobias

AU - Balmann, Alfons

PY - 2013/12

Y1 - 2013/12

N2 - Widespread cropland abandonment occurred after the collapse of socialism across the former Soviet Union, but the rates and spatial patterns of abandoned lands are not well known. As a result, the potential of this region to contribute to global food production and estimates of the carbon sink developing on currently idle lands are highly uncertain. We developed a spatial allocation model that distributes yearly and subnational sown area statistics to the most agriculturally suitable plots. This approach resulted in new, high-resolution (1 km2) annual time series of cropland and abandoned lands in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus from 1990 to 2009. A quantitative validation of the cropland map confirms the reliability of this data set, especially for the most important agricultural areas of the study region. Overall, we found a total of 87 Mha of cropland and 31 Mha of abandoned cropland in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus combined, suggesting that abandonment has been severely underestimated in the past. The abandonment rates were highest in European Russia. Feeding our new map data set into the dynamic vegetation model LPJmL revealed that cropland abandonment resulted in a net carbon sink of 470 TgC for 1990 to 2009. Carbon sequestration was generally slow in the early years after abandonment, but carbon uptake increased significantly after approximately 10 years. Recultivation of older abandoned lands would be associated with high carbon emissions and lead to substantial amounts of carbon not being sequestered in vegetation formations currently developing on idle croplands. Our spatially and temporally explicit cropland abandonment data improve the estimation of trade-offs involved in reclaiming abandoned croplands and thus in increasing agricultural production in this globally important agricultural region.

AB - Widespread cropland abandonment occurred after the collapse of socialism across the former Soviet Union, but the rates and spatial patterns of abandoned lands are not well known. As a result, the potential of this region to contribute to global food production and estimates of the carbon sink developing on currently idle lands are highly uncertain. We developed a spatial allocation model that distributes yearly and subnational sown area statistics to the most agriculturally suitable plots. This approach resulted in new, high-resolution (1 km2) annual time series of cropland and abandoned lands in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus from 1990 to 2009. A quantitative validation of the cropland map confirms the reliability of this data set, especially for the most important agricultural areas of the study region. Overall, we found a total of 87 Mha of cropland and 31 Mha of abandoned cropland in European Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus combined, suggesting that abandonment has been severely underestimated in the past. The abandonment rates were highest in European Russia. Feeding our new map data set into the dynamic vegetation model LPJmL revealed that cropland abandonment resulted in a net carbon sink of 470 TgC for 1990 to 2009. Carbon sequestration was generally slow in the early years after abandonment, but carbon uptake increased significantly after approximately 10 years. Recultivation of older abandoned lands would be associated with high carbon emissions and lead to substantial amounts of carbon not being sequestered in vegetation formations currently developing on idle croplands. Our spatially and temporally explicit cropland abandonment data improve the estimation of trade-offs involved in reclaiming abandoned croplands and thus in increasing agricultural production in this globally important agricultural region.

KW - Carbon sequestration

KW - Food security

KW - Land abandonment

KW - Land use change

KW - Russia

KW - Soviet Union

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84885460862&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1002/2013GB004654

DO - 10.1002/2013GB004654

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84885460862

VL - 27

SP - 1175

EP - 1185

JO - Global Biogeochemical Cycles

JF - Global Biogeochemical Cycles

SN - 0886-6236

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 138854862