Land-based measures

Land

It’s been a long time without rain in Arizona. Florence, United States.

Year: 2018

Photographer: Joshua Brown (edited by Frameworks)


Permafrost patterns of tundra soil, Northeast Greenland National Park

Ice wedges grow as the ice-rich frozen ground contracts during the winter and forms open cracks below the surface.

Year: 2015

Photographer: Peter Prokosch

Stabilizing permafrost by covering it

There have been several isolated suggestions to mitigate permafrost thaw or influence the thaw processes in the active layer by physically covering the surface with materials (see for example https://groups.google.com/g/geoengineering/c/u2b9Xb5B0C8/m/aXQia-nNDbcJ) in a similar way to how glaciers might be preserved (see Glacier Insulation, and Passive Radiative Cooling). Although different materials have been suggested, these have not been worked out further, and are likely to be a very costly, and impractical solution.

Read more →

Reindeer herding Dolgans, Khatanga Region, Taymyr, Russia

In areas around the taiga/tundra boundary in Southern Taymyr since long time different tribes of indigenous peoples have settled.

Year: 1993

Photographer: Peter Prokosch

Reindeer herding

In many Arctic and Northern regions, domesticated or semi-domesticated reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) are the only large herbivores (Uboni et al. 2016). Reindeer play a crucial role in these ecosystems and in the livelihoods and traditions of multiple local and indigenous populations. In light of the major impact of climate change in the Arctic, the capacity of large herbivores to mitigate some of these effects is being explored. Herbivores can have different climate positive effects as they can reduce shrubification and slow ecosystem responses to climate change (Olofsson and Post 2018; Happonen et al. 2021), modify summer and winter surface albedo (te Beest et al. 2016), trample winter snow to thicken permafrost (Beer et al. 2020; Windirsch et al. 2022), and increase biomass and soil carbon sequestration (Ylänne et al. 2018; Ylänne et al. 2021; see also soil management).

Read more →

P7260015

Year: 2003

Photographer: Lars Kullerud

Agricultural soil management

Terrestrial carbon can be stored in biomass above or below the ground, and in soils themselves. Soil organic matter can form differently, and have different amounts of plant and microbial components depending on the availability of water (Cotrufo and Lavallee, 2022). The large amounts of the Earth that have been brought under cultivation over the past 12.000 years have significantly degraded soil carbon levels, and have released some 110 billion metric tons of carbon (Sanderman et al. 2017). Soil security and health is increasingly being recognised as essential for planetary health (Kopittke et al. (2022).

Read more →

Taiga landscape near Rovaniemi, Finland

The photo illustrates the environment around the capital of Finish Lapland, Rovaniemi.

Year: 2013

Photographer: Peter Prokosch

Afforestation, reforestation and forest management

Although the rate of deforestation has slowed over the last few decades, the world is still losing forest cover (FAO 2020). Adequate management, protection, and restoration of existing forests, and the planting of unforested areas, play a crucial role in climate mitigation scenarios (IPCC AR6 WG3), and many countries now include forests in their climate mitigation targets (NDCs).The Northern and Arctic regions are essential in this endeavor since they are home to large swaths of boreal forests that make up 27% of total global forest area (FAO 2020).

Read more →