American Journal of Climate Change

Volume 8, Issue 2 (June 2019)

ISSN Print: 2167-9495   ISSN Online: 2167-9509

Google-based Impact Factor: 2  Citations  

The Carbon Sequestration Potential of Regenerative Farming Practices in South Carolina, USA

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 1638KB)  PP. 157-172  
DOI: 10.4236/ajcc.2019.82009    4,247 Downloads   6,639 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Current production agriculture systems typically focus on yield outcomes at all costs. By shifting to best management practices based on regenerative farming principles, however, agricultural systems worldwide could maintain or even improve yields while sequestering atmospheric carbon (C) into soil organic matter (SOM). To demonstrate the effectiveness of regenerative principles at simultaneously benefiting agriculture and reducing greenhouse gasses, their C sequestration potential was examined through SOM data from 486 soil sampling locations from multiple farms throughout the coastal plains of South Carolina. These data were compared over varying multiple-year periods between 2013 and 2017 as their land management practices shifted from conventional methods to those based on the regenerative-based practice of cover cropping. The implementation of cover crops in crop rotations resulted in statistically significant mean SOM percentage increases of 0.11 (p ≤ 0.001), 0.11 (p ≤ 0.001), and 0.55 (p ≤ 0.001) for sampling sites converted into rotations utilizing cover crops for two, three, and four years, respectively. When averaged out per year for each sampling group, this results in an average of 622, 425, and 1584 lbs./acre/year of C fixed from the atmosphere and retained in the soil as organic matter. Increases were observed across all soil types sampled in the study with soil texture not significantly influencing a soils’ ability to increase soil OM or sequester atmospheric C through cover crop implementation. The calculations based on the coastal plains’ soils studied here demonstrate the promising potential of the application of regenerative farming principles to not only restore degraded biodiversity, recycle nutrients, improve farm profitability, and reduce chemical inputs, but also to sequester atmospheric C and simultaneously help reduce the effect of global climate change while creating healthy soils.

Share and Cite:

Kenne, G. and Kloot, R. (2019) The Carbon Sequestration Potential of Regenerative Farming Practices in South Carolina, USA. American Journal of Climate Change, 8, 157-172. doi: 10.4236/ajcc.2019.82009.

Cited by

[1] Steppe ecosystems in Chilean Patagonia: Distribution, climate, biodiversity, and threats to their sustainable management
Schilling, P Corti… - … in Chilean Patagonia …, 2024
[2] Analysis of the spatial and temporal evolution and drivers of net carbon efficiency of plantations in China
Journal of Cleaner Production, 2024
[3] Regenerative Agriculture—A Literature Review on the Practices and Mechanisms Used to Improve Soil Health
Sustainability, 2023
[4] The soil microbiome: An essential, but neglected, component of regenerative agroecosystems
iScience, 2023
[5] Impact of coal mining on land use changes, deforestation, biomass, and C losses in Central India: Implications for offsetting CO2 emissions
Land Degradation & …, 2022
[6] Understanding the drivers behind farmer decision making toward a new farm management approach: A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the …
2022
[7] Integrating Food Systems into Regional Climate Action Plans: a food security, climate resiliency and adaptation strategy for San Diego, California
2022
[8] INTEGRATING FOOD SYSTEMS INTO REGIONAL CLIMATE ACTION PLANS
2022
[9] Spatiotemporal heterogeneity, convergence and its impact factors: Perspective of carbon emission intensity and carbon emission per capita considering carbon sink …
Environmental Impact Assessment …, 2022
[10] Regenerative tourism model: challenges of adapting concepts from natural science to tourism industry
Journal of Sustainability and …, 2022
[11] 中国农业碳排放强度空间特征及溢出效应分析.
Environmental Science & …, 2021
[12] Regional difference decomposition and its spatiotemporal dynamic evolution of Chinese agricultural carbon emission: considering carbon sink effect
2021
[13] Agriculture régénératrice, émergence d'un concept
Faculté des bioingénieurs, Université catholique de Louvain, 2020
[14] Revisiting the Standard Soil Test: The Potential of Macro-and Microbiological Measures to Improve Agricultural Health and Productivity
2019

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.