Journal article

Land use change and the impact on greenhouse gas exchange in north Australian savanna soils

SPP Grover, SJ Livesley, LB Hutley, H Jamali, B Fest, J Beringer, K Butterbach-Bahl, SK Arndt

Biogeosciences | Published : 2012

Abstract

Savanna ecosystems are subjected to accelerating land use change as human demand for food and forest products increases. Land use change has been shown to both increase and decrease greenhouse gas fluxes from savannas and considerable uncertainty exists about the non-CO 2 fluxes from the soil. We measured methane (CH 4), nitrous oxide (N 2O) and carbon dioxide (CO 2) over a complete wet-dry seasonal cycle at three replicate sites of each of three land uses: savanna, young pasture and old pasture (converted from savanna 5-7 and 25-30 yr ago, respectively) in the Douglas Daly region of Northern Australia. The effect of break of season rains at the end of the dry season was investigated with tw..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was funded by the Australian Research Council grant LP0774812 and partner organisations the NT Government and Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency, Canberra. Bianca Baldiserra, Luke Wiley and Susanna Venn assisted with field and laboratory analyses. We also thank land holders in the Daly River catchment for access to their properties for soil sampling and measurement.