October 8, 2013
Journal Article

Carbon Density and Anthropogenic Land Use Influences on Net Land-Use Change Emissions

Abstract

We examine historical and future land-use emissions using a simple mechanistic carbon-cycle model with regional and ecosystem specific parameterizations. Our central estimate of net terrestrial land-use change emissions, exclusive of climate feedbacks, is 250 GtC over the last three hundred years. This estimate is most sensitive to assumptions for preindustrial forest and soil carbon densities. We also find that estimates are sensitive to the treatment of crop and pasture lands. These sensitivities also translate into differences in future terrestrial uptake in the RCP4.5 land-use scenario. This estimate of future uptake is lower than the native values from the GCAM integrated assessment model result due to lower net reforestation in the RCP4.5 gridded land-use data product

Revised: May 1, 2014 | Published: October 8, 2013

Citation

Smith S.J., and A.J. Rothwell. 2013. Carbon Density and Anthropogenic Land Use Influences on Net Land-Use Change Emissions. BioScience 10, no. 10:6323-6337. PNNL-SA-93356. doi:10.5194/bg-10-6323-2013