Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2024)

Grassland albedo as a nature-based climate prospect: the role of growth form and grazing

  • S McGregor,
  • J P G M Cromsigt,
  • M te Beest,
  • J Chen,
  • D P Roy,
  • H-J Hawkins,
  • G I H Kerley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad8765
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 12
p. 124004

Abstract

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Nature-based solutions for mitigating climate change focus largely on land management to reduce carbon emissions and enhance carbon sequestration. Tree planting, commonly advocated for carbon offset, threatens grassland biodiversity and may induce positive radiative forcing (warming) by lowering albedo. Before making decisions about land-use changes in grasslands, an understanding of the fine-scale albedo of grassy versus woody vegetation is needed. Existing satellite-based albedo products offer global coverage with temporally fine, but spatially coarse, resolution, whereas fine-scale in situ grassland albedo data are sparse. We examined the hypotheses that albedo varies seasonally between grass type patches, between shrub and grass patches, and with grazing at the patch scale. Using a tripod-mounted albedometer, we quantified albedo of seven distinct grassland patches in South Africa’s eastern Karoo during early and late dormancy and growing seasons. Patches included intensely-grazed grazing lawn ( Cynodon dactylon ), grazed and less-grazed red tussock grass ( Themeda triandra ), grazed and less-grazed white tussock grass ( Eragrostis lehmanniana ), shrub ( Pentzia incana ) encroached grass, and bare ground. Season influenced albedo in all patches and, additionally, we found strong differences for the same period between years due to varying rainfall and temperature patterns. For grass-dominated patches, albedo differences were most pronounced during early dormancy, likely due to an effect of grass inflorescences. Albedo of intensely-grazed grazing lawns was consistently higher than other patches, except during early dormancy when white tussock grass albedo was equally high. We found no albedo difference between grazed and less-grazed tussock patches of either red or white grass. Shrub-encroached patches exhibited consistently lower albedo than other patches. Our findings underscore the nuanced relationship between grassland patches and albedo, with shrub encroachment, proposed afforestation, and certain grasses possibly increasing warming potential through reduced albedo. As climate initiatives extend into grasslands, understanding these patterns is essential for climate change mitigation and grassland conservation.

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