Research shows the Caatinga is Brazil’s most efficient carbon capture biome

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Research shows the Caatinga is Brazil’s most efficient carbon capture biome
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Upsides of Social Media MarketingNew Web Hosting Pioneer Emerges, Offering Affordable Hosting Solutions Coupled with…Studies found that for every 100 metric tons of CO2 absorbed by dried-out forests in the semiarid area of Brazil’s northeasern region, 45-60 metric tons do not return to the atmosphere; in the Amazon Rainforest, the balance between carbon absorption and release ranges from 2-11%, compared with 23% in the Cerrado biome.

Over a decade of studies conducted by the National Caatinga Observatory revealed that it has the best carbon sequestration performance among Brazilian biomes. For every 100 metric tons of CO2 absorbed by that forest in Brazil’s semiarid area, 45-60 tons are retained and do not return to the atmosphere.. One of them was Aldrin Perez, from the National Institute of the Semiarid Region , one of the organizations responsible for the project.

This comparative survey was based on data provided by several 15-meter- high towers with equipment that captures gases and are installed in 30 different biomes around the world.The National Caatinga Observatory is responsible for the data. INSA manages it in partnership with the Federal University of Campina Grande and Brazil’s Ministry of Science and Technology, and it involves scholars from several Brazilian universities and research institutes.

Gean Magalhães manages the seedlings used to recover his Caatinga area. Image courtesy of Daki Semiárido Vivo/ASA Brasil. He says his work involved three special strategies. First, fencing the area to prevent animals from trampling the plants. Second, cultivating species with greater capacity to return nutrients to the soil, such as gliricidia, prickly pear, aloe vera and jack beans. Finally, intensive management of pruning and soil cover, which favors water retention.

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