EGU22-11678
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-11678
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

A mid-20th century benchmark estimate of global vegetation biomass carbon stocks 

Manan Bhan1,2, Patrick Meyfroidt2, Simone Gingrich1, Sarah Matej1, and Karl-Heinz Erb1
Manan Bhan et al.
  • 1Universität für Bodenkultur (BOKU), Institute of Social Ecology, Austria
  • 2Universite Catholique de Louvain (UCL), Earth and Life Institute, Belgium

Vegetation biomass carbon stocks play a vital role in the climate system, but the analysis of long-term carbon budgets is hindered by the lack of benchmarked estimates from the 20th century. Here, by integrating inventory-based information on land use and carbon densities in a closed-budget land accounting approach, we establish a mid-20th century global carbon stocks account. Our approach integrates global forest assessments from the mid-20th century, previously ignored in global land change studies, and inventory-based land use reconstructions across the 20th century with contemporaneous information on potential carbon stocks, the likely presence/absence of woody cover and the extent of shifting cultivation in the tropics. In a scenario-based analysis, we find that vegetation stored 540 PgC in biomass (median of 1728 cases per world region; inner quantiles 455-618 PgC). We focus on two Focal Cases, with total carbon stocks of 454-469 PgC, representing reasonable assumptions of carbon densities in forests and other wooded lands to reveal the distribution of carbon stocks across 8 land categories and 14 world regions. We found that ecosystems in Southern America, Western Africa and the erstwhile Soviet Union stored more than 27, 16 and 12% of all carbon stocks, predominantly in forests. Carbon stocks in Other Vegetated Lands, calculated as a residual from all known land uses, demonstrated the highest uncertainties. Comparisons with early-21st century carbon stocks estimates revealed significant reductions in global carbon stocks, but with distinct subcontinental characteristics, providing first evidence of a carbon stocks transition following a forest area transition underway in industrialised regions in the Global North as well as indicating the maximum possible carbon sequestration from restoration initiatives in a realistic timeframe in the future. Our integrative methodology can be used to reconstruct global carbon stocks over the 20th century to supplement other carbon flux-based modelling efforts, thus helping to constrain present and future simulations of global biomass carbon stocks.

How to cite: Bhan, M., Meyfroidt, P., Gingrich, S., Matej, S., and Erb, K.-H.: A mid-20th century benchmark estimate of global vegetation biomass carbon stocks , EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-11678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-11678, 2022.

Displays

Display file