An integrated assessment of mitigation and adaptation in agriculture: soil carbon in grazing systems

An integrated assessment of mitigation and adaptation in agriculture: soil carbon in grazing systems

Thursday, 18 September 2014 - 10:30am to 11:30am

Location: Room B106 in the MSLE building at 207 Bouverie Street

Event Location: 
Room B106 in the MSLE building
207 Bouverie Street
Speakers

Rachelle Meyer completed her PhD at the Climate and Energy College in 2017 and is now working at the University of Melbourne on the impacts of extreme events and associated risk management strategies for the dairy and red meat industries, as well research to improve nitrogen use efficiency in dairies.  Rachelle graduated with a bachelor's in wildlife biology from the University of Montana and an M.S. from the University of Melbourne. She worked for the United States Forest Service for the following 8 years, writing syntheses addressing fire ecology of plant and animal species. While there she devoted increasingly more time to local sustainability efforts and sustainability research, including investigating barriers to implementation of energy efficiency measures in the Forest Service. She is primarily interested in climate change issues that incorporate both natural and human systems and their interactions. 

PhD Project: Integrated analysis of the mitigative and adaptive potential of soil carbon in grazing systems

Rachelle’s thesis uses a whole-farm system modelling approach to quantify the agro-ecosystem benefits and mitigation implications of soil carbon in the grazing systems of western Victoria in both recent and future climates. The primary research questions are:

What are the productivity benefits of greater N supply from mineralization and increases in plant available water holding capacity associated with increased SOM? 

How much does increased soil carbon in a grazing system influence its sink potential and net emissions? 

How do future climate projections affect the productivity benefits and GHG emissions associated with higher SOM at a local level? 

What are the regional-level adaptation and emission consequences of increased SOM? 

Comparing historic and future climates as well as local and regional scales will assist in identifying the potential for synergies or trade-offs of using soil carbon (in the form of SOM) as an adaptation and/or mitigation option. This research will also inform future local and regional scale investigations of potential adaptation-mitigation synergies.

Supervisors in Melbourne: A/Prof Richard Eckard, Dr. Brendan Cullen

Supervisors in Germany: Prof. Hermann Lotze-Campen

Start Date: September 2013    Completion: 2017

Contact: rachelle.meyer@climate-energy-college.org

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