posted on 2020-04-16, 12:40authored byAllie Goldstein, Will R Turner, Seth A Spawn, Kristina J Anderson-Teixeira, Susan Cook-Patton, Joseph Fargione, Holly K Gibbs, Bronson Griscom, Jennifer H Hewson, Jennifer F Howard, Juan Carlos Ledezma, Susan Page, Lian Pin Koh, Johan Rockstroem, Jonathan Sanderman, David G Hole
<p>Avoiding
catastrophic climate change requires rapid decarbonization and improved
ecosystem stewardship. To achieve the latter, ecosystems should be prioritized
by responsiveness to direct, localized action and the magnitude and
recoverability of their carbon stores. Here, we show that a range of ecosystems
contain ‘irrecoverable carbon’ that is vulnerable to release upon land use
conversion and, once lost, is not recoverable on timescales relevant to
avoiding dangerous climate impacts. Globally, ecosystems highly affected by
human land-use decisions contain at least 260 Gt of irrecoverable carbon, with
particularly high densities in peatlands, mangroves, old-growth forests and
marshes. To achieve climate goals, we must safeguard these irrecoverable carbon
pools through an expanded set of policy and finance strategies.</p>
Funding
We thank the Norwegian International Climate and Forest Initiative (NICFI) for financial support (to S.C.P).