School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Ecosulis Ltd., Bath, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2020 Mar 16;375(1794):20190122. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0122. Epub 2020 Jan 27.
Natural climate solutions (NCS) in the Arctic hold the potential to be implemented at a scale able to substantially affect the global climate. The strong feedbacks between carbon-rich permafrost, climate and herbivory suggest an NCS consisting of reverting the current wet/moist moss and shrub-dominated tundra and the sparse forest-tundra ecotone to grassland through a guild of large herbivores. Grassland-dominated systems might delay permafrost thaw and reduce carbon emissions-especially in Yedoma regions, while increasing carbon capture through increased productivity and grass and forb deep root systems. Here we review the environmental context of megafaunal ecological engineering in the Arctic; explore the mechanisms through which it can help mitigate climate change; and estimate its potential-based on bison and horse, with the aim of evaluating the feasibility of generating an ecosystem shift that is economically viable in terms of carbon benefits and of sufficient scale to play a significant role in global climate change mitigation. Assuming a megafaunal-driven ecosystem shift we find support for a megafauna-based arctic NCS yielding substantial income in carbon markets. However, scaling up such projects to have a significant effect on the global climate is challenging given the large number of animals required over a short period of time. A first-cut business plan is presented based on practical information-costs and infrastructure-from Pleistocene Park (northeastern Yakutia, Russia). A 10 yr experimental phase incorporating three separate introductions of herds of approximately 1000 individuals each is costed at US$114 million, with potential returns of approximately 0.3-0.4% yr towards the end of the period, and greater than 1% yr after it. Institutional friction and the potential role of new technologies in the reintroductions are discussed. This article is part of the theme issue 'Climate change and ecosystems: threats, opportunities and solutions'.
北极地区的自然气候解决方案(NCS)有可能大规模实施,从而对全球气候产生重大影响。富碳永久冻土、气候和食草作用之间的强烈反馈表明,一种 NCS 可以通过大型食草动物群落将当前的湿地/湿润苔藓和灌木占主导地位的冻原以及稀疏的森林冻原生态交错带转变为草原。草原占主导地位的系统可能会延迟永久冻土融化并减少碳排放——尤其是在 Yedoma 地区,同时通过增加生产力和草类和杂草深根系统来增加碳捕获。在这里,我们回顾了北极巨型动物生态工程的环境背景;探讨了它可以帮助缓解气候变化的机制;并根据野牛和马进行了潜力估计,目的是评估产生一种在经济上可行的、具有碳效益的生态系统转变的可行性,以及其规模足以在全球气候变化缓解中发挥重要作用。假设生态系统发生了巨型动物驱动的转变,我们发现支持基于巨型动物的北极 NCS 可以在碳市场上获得大量收入。然而,鉴于在短时间内需要大量动物,将此类项目扩大到对全球气候产生重大影响具有挑战性。根据来自 Pleistocene Park(俄罗斯雅库特东北部)的实际信息——成本和基础设施,提出了一个初步的商业计划。一个包含三个独立引入约 1000 头动物的 10 年实验阶段的成本为 1.14 亿美元,在实验结束时的潜在回报约为 0.3-0.4%,在实验结束后超过 1%。讨论了机构摩擦和新技术在重新引入中的潜在作用。本文是“气候变化与生态系统:威胁、机遇与解决方案”主题特刊的一部分。