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Drylands: Carbon Storage in Vegetation and Soils in Drylands |
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![]() Map Projection Interrupted Goode's Homolosine Map Description This map displays the global variation in the density of carbon storage in live vegetation (both above and below-ground) in drylands. The carbon values are expressed as a range in metric tons of carbon per hectare. This map shows storage values at the high end of the range. In terms of quantity of carbon stored, tropical and boreal forests are outstanding. The values for carbon storage in vegetation in the tropics reach a maximum of 250 metric tons per hectare. Temperate forests and tropical savannas store less than the tropical and boreal forests. Non-woody grasslands and drylands store less than the forested areas, and sparsely vegetated and bare desert areas have the least carbon storage potential. The carbon storage potential for drylands ranges from greater than 400 to less than 100 metric tons per hectare, although the majority of drylands store less than 225 metric tons per hectare. Thus, while drylands generally store less carbon than forests on a carbon/unit area basis, the total amount of carbon that drylands store is potentially significant because the area of these ecosystems is extensive. |
Citation: WRI. 2002. World Resources Institute. Drylands, People, and Ecosystem Goods and Services: A Web-based Geospatial Analysis. Available online at: http://www.wri.org Sources:
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