Abstract :
Increase in the use of conservation practices by agriculture in the United States will enhance soil organic carbon
and potentially increase carbon sequestration. This, in turn, will decrease the net emission of carbon dioxide. A
number of studies exist that calibrate the contribution of various individual, site-specific conservation practices on
changes in soil organic carbon. There is a general absence, however, of a comprehensive effort to measure objectively
the contribution of these practices including conservation tillage, the Conservation Reserve Program and conservation
buffer strips to an change in soil organic carbon. This paper fills that void. After recounting the evolution of the
use of the various conservation practices, it is estimated that organic carbon in the soil in 1998 in the United States
attributable to these practices was approximately 12 200 000 metric tons. By 2008, there will be an increase of
approximately 25%. Given that there is a significant potential for conservation practices to lead to an increase in
carbon sequestration, there are a number of policy options that can be pursued. These include education and
technical assistance, financial assistance, research and development, land retirement and regulation and taxes.
Keywords :
conservation practices , Conservation Reserve Program , Global climate change , Conservation tillage