Carbon credits are a potential source of funding for restoration initiatives that contribute to achieving conservation targets in important biodiversity areas. Here we investigated whether fallowing sequesters carbon; a first step in assessing the viability of using carbon financing to promote restoration of threatened vegetation in agricultural landscapes. We used renosterveld, a critically endangered shrubland vegetation of the Cape Floristic Region, as a case study. Carbon stocks of soil and biomass in active fields, fallow fields and intact renosterveld were compared. The total carbon stocks measured in fallow fields (82 Mg C ha-1) show that fallowing can sequester carbon lost in the conversion from intact renosterveld (84 Mg C ha-1) to active fields (69 Mg C ha-1) and that revenues of US$ 10 - 48 ha-1 yr-1 from carbon credits could accrue. Our findings suggest that carbon financing could be used to incentivise ecological restoration in marginal agricultural landscapes. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Mills, A. J., Birch, S. J. C., Stanway, R., Huyser, O., Chisholm, R. A., Sirami, C., & Spear, D. (2013). Sequestering carbon and restoring renosterveld through fallowing: a practical conservation approach for the Overberg, Cape Floristic Region, South Africa. Conservation Letters, 6(4), 255–263. https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12003
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