Stirling Observer

Tree planting not always best way to tackle climate change

- KAIYA MARJORIBAN­KS

Stirling University experts have found that planting huge numbers of trees to mitigate climate change is“not always the best strategy”.

The university boffins and the James Hutton Institute analysed four locations in Scotland where birch trees were planted onto heather moorland – and found that, over decades, there was no net increase in ecosystem carbon storage.

The team – led by Dr Nina Friggens, of the Faculty of Natural Sciences at Stirling – found that any increase to carbon storage in tree biomass was offset by a loss of carbon stored in the soil.

Dr Friggens said:“Both national and internatio­nal government­s have committed to plant huge numbers of trees to mitigate climate change, based on the simple logic that trees – when they photosynth­esise and grow – remove carbon from the atmosphere and lock it into their biomass. However, trees also interact with carbon in soil, where much more carbon is found than in plants.

“Our study considered whether planting native trees on heather moorlands, with large soil carbon stores, would result in net carbon sequestrat­ion – and, significan­tly, we found that over a period of 39 years, it did not.”

The tree-planting experiment­s – in the Grampians, Cairngorms and Glen Affric – were set up by the late Dr John Miles, of the then Institute of Terrestria­l Ecology (a forerunner to the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology), in 1980, and the Hutton Institute in 2005. The research sites enabled the team to assess the impact of tree planting on vegetation and soil carbon stocks, by comparing these experiment­al plots to adjacent control plots consisting of original heath vegetation.

The study recorded a 58 percent reduction in soil organic carbon stocks 12 years after the birch trees had been planted on the heather moorland – and, significan­tly, this decline was not compensate­d for by the gains in carbon contained in the growing trees.

Dr Friggens said:“This work provides evidence that planting trees in some areas of Scotland will not lead to carbon sequestrat­ion for at least 40 years – and, if we are to successful­ly manage our landscapes for carbon sequestrat­ion, planting trees is not always the best strategy.

“Tree planting can lead to carbon sequestrat­ion; however, our study highlights the need to understand where, in the landscape, this approach is best deployed in order to achieve maximum climate mitigation gains.”

Dr Ruth Mitchell, a researcher within the James Hutton Institute’s Ecological Sciences department and co-author of the study, said:“Our work shows that tree planting locations need to be carefully sited, taking into account soil conditions, otherwise the tree planting will not result in the desired increase in carbon storage and climate change mitigation.”

Although conducted in Scotland, the study’s results are relevant in vast areas around the northern fringes of the boreal forests and the southern Arctic tundra, of North America and Eurasia.

Dr Friggens added:“The climate emergency affects us all – and it is important that strategies implemente­d to mitigate climate change – such as large-scale tree planting – are robust and achieve the intended outcomes.”

The paper has been published in Global Change Biology.

 ??  ?? Message Dr Nina Lindstrom Friggens
Message Dr Nina Lindstrom Friggens

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