温带农业景观中的生物能源作物、生物多样性和生态系统服务——协同效应和权衡综述

IF 5.9 3区 工程技术 Q1 AGRONOMY Global Change Biology Bioenergy Pub Date : 2023-08-27 DOI:10.1111/gcbb.13092
Josefin Winberg, Henrik G. Smith, Johan Ekroos
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引用次数: 0

摘要

《巴黎气候变化协定》要求迅速减少温室气体排放。至少在中期的未来,一个重要的缓解战略是用生物能源替代化石燃料。然而,使用农业和森林衍生的生物质作为能源引发了关于气候缓解潜力和与生物多样性保护冲突的争议。气候危机的紧迫性要求利用森林进行碳封存和储存,而不是生物能源,使农业生物质成为化石能源替代的有吸引力的替代品。然而,这需要从对生物多样性和生态系统服务的影响方面对其可持续性进行全面评估。在这篇综述中,我们通过综合生物多样性和生态系统服务影响的结果,首次全面概述了温带气候下生物能源作物生产对土地利用变化对生态系统的影响。我们发现,与生物能源相关的土地利用变化对生态系统既有积极影响,也有消极影响,原始土地利用、生物能源作物类型和生物能源生产规模是影响的重要调节因素。尽管粮食生产存在机会成本风险,但耕地上的多年生作物种植对生物多样性和生态系统服务的负面影响发生率最低。有人建议在剩余土地上种植生物量作为生物能源,以缓解与粮食生产和生物多样性保护的竞争,但我们的研究结果表明,利用边际或废弃土地生产生物能源作物并不能完全解决这些权衡。此外,缺乏对边缘土地和废弃土地的生物多样性价值的实证研究,限制了我们对剩余土地上生物量种植的可持续性影响的理解。我们认为,未来生物能源生产的研究和政策必须明确考虑生物多样性和生态系统服务,以避免两者之间的潜在权衡,并确保可持续的生物能源生产。
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Bioenergy crops, biodiversity and ecosystem services in temperate agricultural landscapes—A review of synergies and trade-offs

The Paris agreement on climate change requires rapid reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. One important mitigation strategy, at least in the intermediate future, is the substitution of fossil fuels with bioenergy. However, using agriculture- and forest-derived biomass for energy has sparked controversy regarding both the climate mitigation potential and conflicts with biodiversity conservation. The urgency of the climate crisis calls for using forests for carbon sequestration and storage rather than for bioenergy, making agricultural biomass an attractive alternative for fossil energy substitution. However, this calls for comprehensive assessments of its sustainability in terms of consequences for biodiversity and ecosystem services. In this review, we provide a first holistic overview of the impacts on ecosystems of land-use changes from bioenergy crop production in temperate climates, by synthesizing results on both biodiversity and ecosystem service impacts. We found that bioenergy-related land-use changes can have both positive and negative effects on ecosystems, with original land use, bioenergy crop type and scale of bioenergy production being important moderators of impacts. Despite the risk of opportunity cost for food production, perennial crop cultivation on arable land had the lowest occurrence of negative impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem services. Growing biomass for bioenergy on surplus land has been suggested as a way to alleviate competition with food production and biodiversity conservation, but our results demonstrate that utilizing marginal or abandoned land for bioenergy crop production cannot fully resolve these trade-offs. Furthermore, there is a lack of empirical studies of the biodiversity value of marginal and abandoned land, limiting our understanding of the sustainability implications of biomass cultivation on surplus land. We argue that future research and policies for bioenergy production must explicitly consider biodiversity and ecosystem services in combination to avoid potential trade-offs between the two and to ensure sustainable bioenergy production.

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来源期刊
Global Change Biology Bioenergy
Global Change Biology Bioenergy AGRONOMY-ENERGY & FUELS
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
96
审稿时长
1.5 months
期刊介绍: GCB Bioenergy is an international journal publishing original research papers, review articles and commentaries that promote understanding of the interface between biological and environmental sciences and the production of fuels directly from plants, algae and waste. The scope of the journal extends to areas outside of biology to policy forum, socioeconomic analyses, technoeconomic analyses and systems analysis. Papers do not need a global change component for consideration for publication, it is viewed as implicit that most bioenergy will be beneficial in avoiding at least a part of the fossil fuel energy that would otherwise be used. Key areas covered by the journal: Bioenergy feedstock and bio-oil production: energy crops and algae their management,, genomics, genetic improvements, planting, harvesting, storage, transportation, integrated logistics, production modeling, composition and its modification, pests, diseases and weeds of feedstocks. Manuscripts concerning alternative energy based on biological mimicry are also encouraged (e.g. artificial photosynthesis). Biological Residues/Co-products: from agricultural production, forestry and plantations (stover, sugar, bio-plastics, etc.), algae processing industries, and municipal sources (MSW). Bioenergy and the Environment: ecosystem services, carbon mitigation, land use change, life cycle assessment, energy and greenhouse gas balances, water use, water quality, assessment of sustainability, and biodiversity issues. Bioenergy Socioeconomics: examining the economic viability or social acceptability of crops, crops systems and their processing, including genetically modified organisms [GMOs], health impacts of bioenergy systems. Bioenergy Policy: legislative developments affecting biofuels and bioenergy. Bioenergy Systems Analysis: examining biological developments in a whole systems context.
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