Aug 11, 2008 10:15 am US/Pacific
Cattails May Help With Climate Change In State
RIO VISTA (AP) ―
On one side of the gravel road are hundreds of acres of corn. On the
other is a different crop that scientists hope will enable farmers to
rebuild sinking islands in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, combat
global warming and make a profit at the same time.
The
U.S. Geological Survey
is growing tules and cattails on about 15 acres on Twitchell Island,
about 5.7 square miles of rich but fragile peat soil 30 miles south of
Sacramento.
Twitchell and other delta islands are slowing sinking, their soil
eaten away by wind, rain and farming. Most are more than 20 feet below
the surrounding water. A levee system keeps them from being flooded.
A collapse of the levees would bring in salt water from
San Francisco Bay,
damaging delta ecosystems and jeopardizing the state and federal
programs that pump fresh water out of the delta for farms and cities to
the south.
The Geological Survey project started 15 years ago as a small
experiment on two 30-foot by 30-foot plots to see if growing mostly
tules and cattails would help rebuild the islands' soil.
The plants can grow high enough to dwarf adults. As they die and
decay, they slowly build up the peat. The soil under the 15-acre site
has risen 1 to 2 feet since the project was moved there in 1996.
"All that soil out there are plants that grew 6,000 years ago and
didn't decompose completely," said Robin Miller, a biogeochemist with
the Geological Survey. "That's what peat is. So we're just making the
same thing happen that happened here for millennia."
About 2 1/2 years ago, scientists noticed that their "big garden," as Miller calls it, was removing carbon dioxide, one of the
greenhouse gases blamed for
global warming.
"We were capturing a lot of (carbon dioxide) at levels much greater
than other systems marshes and forests, grasslands," said Roger
Fujii, the project's director and the bay-delta program chief for the
Geological Survey's California Water Science Center.
That revelation persuaded state and federal officials to expand the
project. They are now trying to determine whether the tules and
cattails could be used to combat global warming through what they call
"carbon-capture" farming.
Under that scenario, companies could meet state
greenhouse gas limits by paying delta farmers to plant tules and cattails rather than row crops.
"They can just sit back and watch the tules grow, and they should be
making money," Fujii said. "That's what the vision is. It's not to do
it just on Twitchell Island. It's to see if we can do it throughout the
delta on subsided land."
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is at the heart of California's
water delivery system. It's the meeting place of some of the state's
largest rivers, draining an area stretching from the Cascades in
Northern California to the central Sierra Nevada.
The region between the state capital and
San Francisco Bay is dotted with dozens of islands, most of them surrounded by narrow canals and many used for farming.
With a three-year, $12.3 million grant from the
state Department of Water
Resources, the Geological Survey and its research partners at the
University of California, Davis plan to move the project to a 300- to
400-acre site somewhere in the delta next year.
The larger size would enable farmers to see how "they could really make a difference," Fujii said.
A series of questions needs to be answered before scientists can
conclude that carbon-capture farming is beneficial. Among them is
whether turning cornfields into tule-filled wetlands will only replace
one type of greenhouse gas with more of another.
Plowing for agriculture oxidizes the soil, creating "perfect banquet
conditions" for microbes that eat the peat and release carbon dioxide,
Miller said. Flooding the fields with low levels of water to make
wetlands limits the oxygen but forces the microbes to turn to other
compounds.
"When oxygen is limited, the bugs, the microbes, have to eat
and breathe somehow," she said. "They will use sulfate, iron or some
other compound. Instead of producing (carbon dioxide) at the end of the
pathway ... they end up producing methane," another greenhouse gas.
Scientists also want to be sure that changing cornfields to wetlands won't increase a third greenhouse gas, nitrous oxide.
They also are trying to determine how to minimize another
potential problem dissolved organic matter, which leaches out of peat
soil and plants when exposed to water.
When delta water containing dissolved organic matter is treated
for drinking supplies, it forms something called "disinfection
byproducts," compounds that are carcinogenic. Geological Survey
scientists want to make sure that creating more wetlands won't increase
levels of those compounds.
They also want to be sure that carbon-capture farming won't
cause the release of mercury that has been washing into the delta from
mining operations going back to the Gold Rush era.
If scientists can work out those problems, they hope to develop
a manual showing farmers how to create their own carbon-capturing
wetlands and keep them healthy.
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