Soil Carbon Drawdown: How?
Healthy soils are central to sustainable agroecosystems required to meet local food, 100% renewable energy, and carbon neutrality goals in Hawaii and elsewhere. However, how carbon transfers from the atmosphere to the soil and is kept there long enough to simultaneously improve soil health and assist with climate change mitigations efforts is complex and often misunderstood. Therefore, our research unravels the complicated processes that produce multiple co-benefits of healthy soil, including carbon sequestration and drawdown.
Post Series: Hawaii
- 1.Homeless in Hawaii Documentary 2017
- 2.Wings, Water, Wind Created Hawaii’s Ecosystem | National Geographic
- 3.New Protected Ocean Area Is Bigger Than All U.S. National Parks Combined | National Geographic
- 4.Divers swim alongside famous Deep Blue shark
- 5.Living Off the Land in Hawaii | Explorer
- 6.Explore the Valley Protecting Hawaii’s Ancient Plants
- 7.Taking on Hawaii’s Plant Extinction Crisis
- 8.Onward: Hawaii Botanist Races to Save Rare Plants | National Geographic
- 9.Preventing Plant Extinction in Hawaii
- 10.Saving endangered Native Hawaiian plants one seed at a time
- 11.New Lyon Arboretum laboratory will expand Hawaiian plant conservation
- 12.Hawaii Isles of Extinction | Storyteller Media
- 13.Protecting Hawaii’s endangered plants, animals
- 14.Critical piece of Native Hawaiian plant conservation completed
- 15.Nowhere Else on Earth: Indigenous Plants of Hawaii
- 16.Drone Finds Extinct Hawaiian Flower
- 17.Watch A Free-Diver Rescue This Entangled Whale Shark | National Geographic
- 18.Soil Carbon Drawdown: How?
- 19.Amazing Bird: Age 65, May Have Had 40 Chicks, Traveled Three Million Miles | National Geographic
- 20.Albatrosses Swallow Plastic Waste | Hawaii: Message in the Waves | BBC Earth