Stopping fires in savannahs may not have the carbon benefits we thought

Publicly released:
International

Suppressing fires and planting trees in savannas may not substantially increase the amount of carbon stored in these ecosystems over the decades, according to international research.  Using data from South Africa, the authors compared plots of land burned annually with unburned plots and plots burned every three years. They found that fire suppression only increased the total-ecosystem carbon storage by about 0.35 tonnes of carbon per hectare per year — nearly 30 times less than the previous estimates. The authors say the findings cast doubt over the benefits of increasing tree cover in savannas for climate-change mitigation. 

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Ecology: Assessing the carbon storage benefits of savanna conservation (N&V)

Suppressing fires and planting trees in savannas may not lead to substantial increases in carbon storage over timescales of decades, according to a study published in Nature. The findings cast doubt over the benefits of increasing tree cover in savannas for climate-change mitigation.

Over half of global, fire-driven carbon emissions come from savannas. Increasing tree cover, by suppressing fires and planting trees, has been invoked as a strategy to reduce emissions by increasing carbon storage. However, long-term studies estimating carbon storage above and below the ground in this biome have been lacking.

Drawing on data from a 68-year-old burning experiment in Kruger National Park, South Africa, Yong Zhou, Carla Staver and colleagues compared plots of land burned annually with unburned plots and plots burned every three years. They estimated the amount of carbon stored in the soil and plants in each of the plots. The authors found that fire suppression increases total-ecosystem carbon storage in the study site, but only by about 0.35 tonnes of carbon per hectare per year — nearly 30 times less than the previous estimates. 

In an accompanying News & Views article, Niall Hanan and Anthony Swemmer note that the experiments were conducted in a limited number of plots in the wettest part of the park, and that "similar studies in other regions are needed to further explore the role of fire suppression and tree planting in fire-prone savannahs."  

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research Springer Nature, Web page Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends).
Journal/
conference:
Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Yale University, USA
Funder: . Y.Z. was supported by a G. Evelyn Hutchinson Environmental Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies, A.C.S. was partially supported by a grant from the United States National Science Foundation (NSF MSB-1802453) and by funding from Yale University, J.S., P.B.B., E.G.H. and A.B.D. from Harvard University, and J.R.B. from the USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station.
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.