This study
is one of the first to measure this process, called carbon
sequestration, in an urban setting. Ron Follett of ARS' Soil-Plant-Nutrient
Research Unit in Fort Collins, Colo., and Yaling Qian of CSU studied
16 soil records from golf courses in the Denver area, some of
which go back 45 years. They found that carbon sequestration lasts
for up to 31 years in fairways and 45 years in greens, after which
the rates slow or become negligible. While carbon sequestration
exists on tees, it was not nearly as much as occurs on the fairways
and greens, and the researchers are still investigating the reasons
for this difference. The researchers also noticed that a rapid
increase in carbon sequestration occurs in the first 25-30 years
after the turfgrass is established.
The study
found that nearly a ton of carbon per acre per year is stored
in the soil of fairways and one ton per acre of carbon for
greens. The scientists are using computer models to figure out
the potential rates for carbon sequestration on golf courses.
They are also conducting a more detailed evaluation of soil samples
in fairways and the irrigated and non-irrigated rough on golf
courses.
More information
about this research can be found in the June issue of Agricultural
Research magazine, available on the World Wide Web at: http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/jun03/golf0603.htm
ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research,
ARS News Service Agricultural Research Service, USDA David Elstein,
(301) 504-1654, delstein@ars.usda.gov June 3, 2003