Salad

Brazil’s underprotected Cerrado savanna stores a staggering amount of carbon, study finds

The Cerrado savanna occupies about 26% of Brazil and is home to more than 12,000 plant species and diverse animal life. It’s also speckled with groundwater-fed wetlands that serve as the headwaters for two-thirds of Brazil’s major waterways, including the Amazon River, making it not only a biodiversity hot spot but also a critical ecosystem to preserve water security in the region.

This savanna’s wetlands also have another superpower: storing carbon in their waterlogged soils. According to a new paper published today in New Phytologist, the Cerrado’s wetlands store carbon at a density about 6 times greater than the Amazon rainforest’s vegetation.

Related posts

800-year-old ‘hugging skeletons’ are genetically confirmed as Poland’s only medieval same-sex double burial

sys.admin

What are ghost lineages, remnants of the past that still exist in our DNA today?

sys.admin

Scientists identify main cause of extreme nausea and vomiting in pregnancy

sys.admin

Leave a Comment