Geomorphology and the carbon cycle

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Bibliographic Information

Title
"Geomorphology and the carbon cycle"
Statement of Responsibility
Martin Evans
Publisher
  • Wiley
Publication Year
  • 2022
Book size
23 cm

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Notes

Content Type: text (rdacontent), Media Type: unmediated (rdamedia), Carrier Type: volume (rdacarrier)

Includes bibliographical references (p. [240]-286) and index

Summary: "As global atmospheric carbon concentrations continue to rise, there has been an increasing focus in the 21st century on understanding terrestrial components of the carbon cycle. This has been a major interdisciplinary research agenda and advances in remote sensing and modelling of vegetation systems have developed increasingly detailed understanding of above ground carbon cycling (Fatichi et al. 2019; Lees et al. 2018). Similarly, the storage of carbon in soils below ground has been the focus of extensive and detailed research (Wiesmeier et al. 2019). However, arguably understanding of soil carbon processes lags behind analysis of above ground systems. For example, it is notable that, in the paper cited at the top of this chapter (Bloom et al. 2016), the terrestrial carbon model that the paper applies includes significant detail around the cycling of carbon through biomass, modelling carbon in leaves, roots and wood separately, whilst soil carbon represents a single store. Where more detailed models

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