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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-10-2610/26/2021 CONSERVATION BOARD 10/26/2021 Hybrid Members Present: Gian Dodici (Chair), Bob Beck, Anne Clark, Craig Schutt, Andrew Miller, Nancy Munkenbeck, Tim Woods Absent: David Wilson, Jeanne Grace Liaisons: Loren Sparling (Town Board), Simon St. Laurent (Planning Board) Guest(s): Ron Szymanski & David Weinstein The meeting was called to order at 7:04 PM. Review and approval of minutes dated September 28, 2021 On motion made by G Dodici, seconded by C Schutt, minutes were unanimously approved as amended. Planning Board Update The Planning Board is trying to get through the Comprehensive Plan. They talked about getting the plan out to the public and the board's, they just need to get through one more section. They are derailed by the bridge and will be spending more time on that at the next meeting. Rail Trail Task Force Update The new section of the trail through the Game Farm is open. You can now go in from Stevenson Road to Game Farm Road and come back out to Stevenson Road. It is 1800 feet between the two roads and it’s a beautiful, scenic trail. Additional work on fences will proceed in the future. They are still waiting on county highway to approve the crossing on Game Farm Road. There’s a buyer for the former Wilcox Press property. It’s a manufacturing company that makes steel bed frames. There were two reps at the Town Board meeting, and they are very happy to be coming to Dryden. They are anticipating there to be 60+ employees. They have been in business since the early 1900’s and the family members all went to Cornell. So far, they seem to like the idea of the Rail Trail and the bridge by their property. Town Board Update L Sparling checked in with Ray Burger regarding the board's comments on the dwsp2 and they think there was a problem with downloading. The comments didn’t show if it was downloaded. L Sparling forwarded the email to R Burger and he will make sure the comments are incorporated. At the last Conservation Board meeting, members mentioned sending out a Conservation Board letter to various DPW’s regarding ditching and best practices. Supv Leifer suggested contacting the mayors first. 10/26/2021 The Town Board talked about the SUP regarding Scotties Auto Repair. That SUP has been left open because the stream that borders the property is no longer in a location sited by the town. Until that is rectified, the SUP is being kept open. The county is looking into it and hopefully it will be resolved by November’s meeting and then it can be left to a vote. L Sparling emailed the True Green’s solar landing update report October 2022. Basically, all of the trees they have planted have died. They think it has been over watered so they will take different steps in 2022. (attached) A Miller asked if they could plant native tree species instead of a tree like juniper that he wouldn’t expect to see wandering through the hills of Dryden. L Sparling will send that idea to Ray. EMC Update The October 14th EMC meeting was a tour of the Lindsay-Parson Biodiversity Preserve in Danby. Ag Committee Update Didn’t meet because they are waiting to comment on the Comp Plan. Soil Sequestration of CO2/Topsoil Management program R Szymanski gave a brief backstory as to why he is so passionate on best farming practices. T Woods gave a presentation on soil sequestration of CO2/topsoil management program. Presentation attached. Questions/Comments: What can we do locally to move in a direction that may be more sustainable? It takes education. D Weinstein asked if Tim or Ron had been in contact with the ag group at Cornell. They have developed a set of best management practices and pamphlets that are oriented towards how farmers can accelerate the amount of carbon sequestered in their soils. They have not talked with them so D Weinstein is going to send them their information. Deer Management Program T Woods presented an article (attached). Railbed washout There’s a hole in the rail bed that’s about 100 feet across and 25-30 feet deep. It sits in large wetlands. T Woods talked to Bruno about how much it may cost to fix this problem but there are no good estimates at this time. Bruno thought it would cost about $50,000 but T Woods and R Szymanski think it’ll be closer to $250,000. There is lack of access and permits that are required. Photos attached. T Woods said the landowner actually took the culvert out accidentally while trying to clear a beaver dam. B Beck said he knows what the rail trail has to deal with it. He believes the gap is 40 ft wide and 15 ft deep unless it has been washed out more since the last time he was there. That is on private land so they won’t go in there and do anything without an agreement from the land owner. G Dodici thanked T Woods & R Szymanski for their presentation. 10/26/2021 Cayuga Lake Watershed Cayuga lake watershed intermunicipal organization is having a presentation tomorrow, 10/27/2021, about municipal tools to protect stream buffers that is open to everyone via zoom. There being no further business, the meeting was adjourned at 8:00 PM Respectfully submitted, Emily Banwell Paradigm Shift for Understanding & Mitigating Global Warming Phenomenon 1. Anthropogenic Contributions Industrial Agricultural 2. Problems Deforestation Soil Evaporation & Aquifer Depletion Topsoil Oxidation, Erosion & Depletion Desertification Carbon Cycle Interruption & Carbon Dioxide Release Hardpan Creation Plant Root Depth & Vitality Decrease Plant/Microorganism Symbiosis Loss Beneficial Soil Microorganism Die Off Humus Production Interrupted & Degraded Soil Fertility & Nutrient Availability Loss Corresponding Food Nutrition Loss High Volume Waste Producing Feed Lots Ever-Increasing Dependency on Synthetic/Toxic Chemicals Fertilizers Herbicides Pesticides Ever-Increasing Production Costs Ever-Decreasing Profit Margin 3. Solutions Organic Low-till/No-till & Continuous Cover Crop Farming Minimize Use of Multi-Pass Heavy Equipment Maximize Managed Livestock Rotational Grazing Grassland & Forest Propagation Revitalize Natural Carbon/Nitrogen/Oxygen/Water Cycles Re-establish Healthy Plant/Microorganism Symbiosis Invigorate Soil Fertility & Top Soil Production Increase Food Nutrition Levels Increase Aquifer Water Load & Soil Humidity Maximize Local Food Production Increase Local Use of Methane Digesters & Biofuels Build Economic Vitality of Smaller Independent Farms And... Soil Sequestration & Drawdown of Atmospheric Carbon Soil Carbon Restoration:Can Biology do the Job? by Jack Kittredge, policy director, NOFA/Masswww.nofamass.orgNortheast Organic Farming Association/Massachusetts Chapter, Inc.August 14, 2015 Introduction A great deal of discussion in scientific and govern-mental circles has been focused recently on how to deal with greenhouse gas emissions and the resulting weather extremes they have created. Most analysts believe we must stop burning fossil fuels to prevent further increases in atmospheric carbon, and find ways to remove carbon already in the air if we want to lessen further weather crises and the associated human trag-edies, economic disruption and social conflict that they bring. But where can we put that carbon once it is removed from the air? There is only one practical approach -- to put it back where it belongs, in the soil. Fortunately, this is not an expensive process. But it does take large numbers of people agreeing to take part. Since few people will change what they are doing without a good reason, we have written this short paper. We hope it explains the problem of carbon dioxide buildup and climate change, how carbon can be taken out of the atmosphere and restored to the soil, and the advantages that can come to farmers and consumers from growing in carbon-rich soils. Climate Change Weather anomalies are notoriously difficult to docu-ment. To do so requires good data over a long time, and clear standards for what constitutes an anomaly. Re-cently, however, as more and more people are interest-ed in the topic, development of the data and standards has progressed. The key factors in extreme weather are excessive heat, precipitation, and air moisture. Recent studies have found that monthly mean temperature records, extreme precipitation events, and average air moisture content have all risen over the last 50 to 150 years. (Coumou) Most scientists believe that the cause of such unpre-dictable extremes is the “anthropogenic” (originat-ing in human activities) buildup of greenhouse gases (GHG) in the atmosphere. Rigorous modeling studies and analyses of extreme weather events have found human-caused climate change to be a contributing fac-tor in many such extremes. (Peterson) According to the American Association for the Advancement of Science, “Based on well-established evidence, about 97% of climate scientists have concluded that human-caused climate change is happening.” (AAAS) How Greenhouse Gases Cause Climate Change Greenhouse gases, primarily carbon dioxide but also methane, ozone and nitrous oxide, have for millions of years been emitted from soil and water into the atmo-sphere by natural processes like animal respiration, swamp out-gassing and releases from nitrogen fixing 2 Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? 3 bacteria. (EPA) Those gases are also broken down by natural processes and returned to their sources in a con-tinual cycle. As long as the amount of greenhouse gases emitted and the amount returned to sources remain bal-anced, they will not cause climate change. We need a certain level of greenhouse gases in the at-mosphere. They trap solar radiation so that the earth re-flects less of it back into space. This raises the amount of heat driving the planetary forces that cause weather. If we did not have some such gases, earth would be frozen year-round and far too cold for human life. The level of a gas in the atmosphere is measured in units called “parts per million” (ppm). Nitrogen, Oxygen and Argon, the primary gases in our atmosphere, collective-ly account for 999,000 ppm. Throughout human history the atmospheric level of carbon dioxide has stayed at roughly 280 ppm, or less than 0.03%. Human Disturbance of the Carbon Cycle Since the dawn of agriculture some 12,000 years ago, however, human caused deforestation, land clearings and crop tillage have released excess carbon dioxide. Using deep ice core analysis and tchniques, scientists have detected early spikes in atmospheric carbon diox-ide and methane that actually correspond to agricultural expansion thousands of years ago in Mesopotamia and China. (Amundson) More recently, since about 1750, with the rapid in-crease in the burning of fossil fuels and the more recent industrialization of agriculture, the scale and number of human-caused sources of GHG have increased dramati-cally. With more coming out of the ground now, and less returning to it, the level of carbon dioxide in the air is growing and now stands at 400 ppm. The Scope of the Problem(for those who like numbers!) Note: calculations in this field all involve use of the metric system, in which a ton is a metric ton that weighs 1000 kilograms or 2204.6 lbs. A Gigaton (Gt) is a billion metric tons. A hectare is 10,000 square meters or 2.47 acres. Scientists have estimated that we need to get the atmo-spheric carbon dioxide level back to about 350 ppm to avoid catastrophic climate change. (NASA) (Many researchers argue that a safer goal is closer to the pre-industrial level estimated at 275 - 280 ppm, but most public debate has settled on the 350 number.) One ppm of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is equal to about 7.8 Gt of it. A molecule of carbon dioxide is mostly oxygen and the carbon in that molecule is only a little over a quarter of it (27.3% to be precise). Thus one ppm of atmospheric carbon dioxide contains 2.125 Gt of carbon (for purposes of illustration this is about the size of a cubic kilometer of solid graphite). So we need to be living with carbon dioxide at or below 350 ppm but it is already 400 and growing. What can we do? Suppose We Lower Emissions? There is no question that humanity as a whole needs to stop releasing excessive amounts of greenhouse gases. It is estimated that about two thirds of those emissions are because of our burning of fossil fuels. (Ontl) We need to end our reliance on fossil fuels and develop al-ternative sources of energy. This is well known by gov-ernments. International groups have been established to further this goal. It is likely to be one of the hardest changes to make in human history, but we need to find the policies and mechanisms to make this happen if we want to survive. But that is not our only problem. Suppose we could stop all emissions tomorrow? The GHG that we have already released into the atmosphere will continue to heat the globe for decades and perhaps centuries. That heating will melt ice and frozen soils, raising sea levels and releasing large quantities of greenhouse gases still frozen. This is a potential problem in the arctic, for instance. There an abundance of frozen methane, a potent GHG, can be released into the atmosphere by melting. An enormous amount of carbon is also frozen in per-mafrost. A warming environment can expose this to digestion by microbes, in which case it will be exhaled as carbon dioxide. If that digestion happens where there is no oxygen, like a swamp or wetland, that carbon will be released by other microbes as methane. (NSIDC) So lowering emissions is not enough. Once we do that, we must also stop the rise in global temperature. If we are at roughly 400 ppm carbon dioxide now and want to get back to 350 ppm quickly, we need to take carbon out of the atmosphere and bury it somewhere. We need to find a long term home for 50 ppm of carbon dioxide, which is 106.25 Gt of carbon. Can that be done? Where Can We Put All That Carbon? We cannot safely store atmospheric carbon in the 70% of the planet that is covered with water. Carbon dioxide dissolves in water and forms carbonic acid. For de-cades now we have been seeing the effects of a gradu-ally increasing amount of carbonic acid in our oceans. Oceanic pH has been falling and acidification has been 4 Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? killing many forms of sea life, including shellfish, cor-als, and plankton. (NOAA) Storing carbon in the soil, however, is a different story. That is where the carbon came from, and where it is needed. Scientists estimate that since the industrial revolution land clearing and cultivation for agriculture have released 136 Gt of carbon from the world’s soil. (Lal 2004) So by our clearing land and tilling fields, soil has lost more carbon than we need to put back. How much carbon does the soil still contain? Vastly more. Again, scientists estimate that in the top 30 centimeters (about a foot) global soils contain around 700 Gt of carbon. If you count the whole top meter of soil (over 3 feet) that number more than doubles to about 1500 Gt. (Powlson) Clearly the soil, which once contained all this carbon, can do so again. But before we try to answer the question about putting 106.25 Gt of carbon in the soil, let’s understand the soil a little better Soil’s Carbon Hunger Soil is literally alive. It is full of bacteria, fungi, algae, protozoa, nematodes and many, many other creatures. In a teaspoon of healthy soil, in fact, there are more microbes than there are people on earth. (Hoorman) Of course, as carbon-based life forms, this teeming com-munity requires constant supplies of organic matter to survive. That organic matter (about 58% of which is carbon) comes in the form of living organisms, their exudates, which are often simple sugars, and their residues, often carbohydrates like cellulose. These compounds are rich in energy, readily accessible to or-ganisms, and rapidly assimilated by soil microbes. The half-life of simple sugars in surface soils, for instance, before they are consumed, can be less than 1 hour. (Dungait) This tremendous appetite of soil organisms for carbon means that in healthy soil they quickly consume avail-able organic matter. It is taken up into their bodies, or is burned as energy and carbon dioxide is given off. Microbes in an acre of Iowa corn in fact exhale more carbon dioxide than do 25 healthy men at work. (Albrecht) Once those microbes die the carbon in their bodies becomes available for other organisms to de-compose and exhale. The activity of soil organisms follows seasonal as well as daily cycles. Not all organisms are active at the same time. At any moment in time most are barely active or are even dormant. Availability of food is an important factor that influences the population and level of activity of soil organisms. (FAO) Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? 5 Photosynthesis But if carbon is so rapidly consumed in soil, then why does it not quickly vanish? The answer is that plants are constantly renewing the supply. Since their evolution 3.5 billion years ago, plants have thrived using their remarkable power to take carbon out of the air and put it into living matter. The process, of course, is called photosynthesis, which is taught to most school children. It works like this: the chlorophyll molecule in plants’ leaves allows them to absorb the energy from light and use that to break apart water molecules (H20) into hy-drogen and oxygen atoms. The plant then releases those oxygen atoms as molecular oxygen (two oxygen atoms bound together – O2) back into the atmosphere and temporarily stores the hydrogen atoms. In the second stage of photosynthesis the hydrogen atoms are bound to carbon dioxide molecules (CO2) to create simple carbohydrates such as the sugar glucose (C6H12O6). This process, like all chemical reactions, is subject to the availability of the components. Since carbon dioxide is present in the atmosphere at such a low con-centration (now 0.04%) it often is the limiting factor in this process. (RSC) At higher concentrations of the gas, more energy will be drawn from available light and more water taken in by the plant to increase carbohy- drate production. (Ontl) In other situations, like at night or in a drought, light or water can be the limiting factor. The sheer scale of this process is impressive. An acre of wheat in a year can take in 8,900 pounds of carbon in the form of carbon dioxide, combine it with water, and make it into sugar. The resultant sugar will weigh 22,000 pounds. This process is so active that an es-timated 15% of all the carbon dioxide in the world’s atmosphere moves through photosynthetic organisms each year. (SAPS) Root Exudates Photosynthesis, of course, gives plants and other pho-tosynthetic organisms (like blue-green algae) a special role in life. All living things are carbon-based, and need to consume carbon to survive. If you can draw carbon out of thin air, as plants do, you have a commanding advantage. But even if you can’t make carbon com-pounds, you must have them. How else can soil microbes get carbon? They can “earn” it! One of the more remarkable things that soil scientists are learning about plants and soil organisms is that they seem to have co-evolved in a mutually beneficial relationship. 6 Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? When plants photosynthesize and make carbohydrates in their chloroplasts, they use some of those com-pounds for their cells and structure, and some they burn for their life energy. But they “leak” or exude a signifi-cant amount of these compounds as “liquid carbon” into the soil. (Jones SOS) Estimates vary but between 20 and 40 percent of the carbon a plant has fixed by photosynthesis is transferred to the rhizosphere (soil zone immediately surrounding the roots). (Walker) Why in the world would a plant leak sugary sap into the dirt? As bait. Hungry bacteria, fungi, and other soil organisms will quickly show up to devour the tasty carbon-containing root exudates. But they soon want more – and the best way to get them is to assist the plant in making more. If a plant is healthy and strong, it can devote more resources to photosynthesis and exude more carbon. So microbes aid the plant in many diverse ways in order to help it thrive and produce more liquid carbon. As we have learned more about soil biochemistry we have discovered that, through root exudates, plants have the capacity to control much of their local envi-ronment – to regulate the local soil microbial commu-nity, to cope with herbivore predation, to “purchase” shipments of distant nutrients, to alter the chemical and physical properties of nearby soil, and to inhibit the growth of competing plants. Microbial Symbiosis It should be stated that much of what follows is still under study. Soils are a frontier about which many things are yet to be learned. The microbial community is extremely diverse -- between 90 and 99% of the spe-cies in it cannot even be cultured in labs with current technologies. (Jastrow) The soil microbial community is more than 90% bac-teria and fungi, by mass. The exact ratio between these two kinds of organisms varies. Undisturbed soils like grasslands and forests will benefit fungi whose thread-like hyphae remain undisturbed. Cultivation or the use of synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, however, reduces the fungal population. A major factor in microbial success is whether or not their immediate physical environment protects them. Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? 7 Protection can be provided by clays, which scientists think might maintain an optimal pH, absorb harmful metabolites and/or prevent desiccation. Small pores (for “hiding”) in the local substrate are also thought to prevent predation on the smaller organisms by larger ones like protozoa. (Six) Protected organisms have been reported to die off at a rate of less than 1% a day, whereas as many as 70% of unprotected ones can suc-cumb daily. Bacteria Bacteria are amazing chemists. A group of them, called plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR), work their magic helping plants through a number of bio-chemical pathways. Some may “fix” nitrogen from the atmosphere, putting it into a form that is available to plants. Others can synthesize phytohormones that improve stages of plant growth. Yet others can solubi-lize phosphate, a relatively insoluble essential nutri-ent, and make it available for plant growth, or produce natural fungicides to assist plants in resisting fungal diseases. (Velivelli) One PGPR has been isolated from many common plants including wheat, white clover and garlic. This bacterium actually produces different antibiotics, substances that fight pathogens and help plants resist disease. (Timmusk) Fungi Another example of microbial symbiosis is that of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. In this symbiosis the fungus colonizes two different environments, the roots of the host plant and the surrounding soil, connecting the two with its long hyphae. This enables the host plant to have an improved uptake of water and mineral nutrients conducted along those hyphae. This relation-ship has been documented in connection with many minerals, including phosphorus, nitrogen, zinc and cop-per. (Jansa) By some estimates over 90% of terrestrial plants enjoy this association with arbuscular mycorrhi-zal fungi. (Cairney) Some scientists estimate that 85 to 90 percent of the nutrients plants require are acquired by carbon ex-change where root exudates provide microbial energy in exchange for minerals or trace elements otherwise unavailable to the plant. (Jones SOS) 8 Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? These relationships benefit both parties, at no cost. The only extra energy needed is provided by the sunlight, which enables the now stronger plant to produce more compounds to energize and support the microbes. Soil Aggregates One important aspect of this story is the soil struc-ture called an “aggregate”. If you squeeze a handful of healthy soil and then release it, it should look like a bunch of peas. Those are the aggregates. If the soil remains in hard chunks, then it is not well aggregated. Aggregates are stable enough to resist wind and water erosion, but porous enough to let air, water, and roots move through them. Aggregates are the fundamental unit of soil func-tion and play a role similar to that of root nodules in legumes, creating a protected space. (Jones SOS) The aggregate is helped to form by hyphae of mycorrhizal fungi that create a “sticky-string bag” that envelops and entangles soil particles. (Jastrow) Liquid carbon exudates from plant roots and fungi enable the produc-tion of glues and gums to form the aggregate walls. (Jones SOS) Inside those walls a lot of biological activity takes place, again fueled by the carbon exudates. Most ag-gregates are connected to plant roots, often fine feeder roots, or to mycorrhizal fungal networks too small to be seen. The moisture content inside an aggregate is higher than outside, and there is lower oxygen pres-sure inside. These are important properties enabling nitrogen-fixation and other biochemical activities to take place. (Jones SOS) One of the important glues which holds aggregates together is a glycoprotein called “glomalin”. Glomalin and soil aggregate stability seem to be closely associ-ated. (Nichols) Just discovered in 1996, glomalin is now believed by some scientists to account for 27 per-cent of the carbon in soil and to last for more than 40 years, depending on conditions. Glomalin appears to be produced by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi using liquid carbon exuded by plants. It may enable fungal hyphae to bind to root and soil particles, and to bridge over air spaces. (Comis) Now that we know more about soil, and how carbon is pumped into it by plants to encourage symbiotic rela-tionships with microbes, we can ask the question again: How Quickly Can We Restore Enough Carbon to the Soil to Mitigate Weather Extremes We have seen above that one part per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere contains 2.125 Gigatons of carbon. If that is the case, and we are at 400 ppm and need to get back to 350, we need to restore 50 ppm, or 106.25 Gt of carbon, to the soil. We know that all that carbon will fit in the soil because that is where it came from. We have brought 136 Gt of carbon out from the soil by land clearing and agricul-ture since the beginning of the industrial age. But how quickly can we put that carbon back in? Over the last 20 years, since people have been thinking about restoring carbon in soil, many studies have been done to measure the rate at which agricultural photo-synthesis can build up soil carbon. We have looked at a number of those studies, conducted over the last decade or so, covering many different types of soils on five continents and various kinds of agriculture. The studies use different methodologies and of course report quite divergent results. But from reading those studies, several things are evident. • Perennial growing systems can restore more carbon than most other agricultural methods. All the pasture based trials reported exceptional amounts of carbon restored, from 1.9 to 3.2 metric tons of carbon per acre annually, and averaging 2.6 tons. (Machmuller, Rodale, IFOAM) We have found few studies of pe-rennial cropping systems building large amounts of soil carbon, but there is some evidence that perennial woody crops can do so. One study found that degraded mining soils gained 2.8 metric tons of carbon per acre per year when planted to the legume black locust and managed as a coppiced biomass crop in a short rota-tion system. (Quinkenstein) More studies need to be done before we can fully evaluate the contributions of perennial woody or herbaceous crops to restoring soil carbon. • Use of synthetic chemical fertilizers, especially nitrogen and phosphorus, will seriously reduce or in many cases even eliminate any soil carbon buildup. The appropriate use of manure and compost, however, does not seem to impede soil carbon increase. (Jones SOS, Rodale) • Studies of row crops, even when raised without syn-thetic chemicals, reported carbon gains smaller than did pasture studies, ranging from 0.23 to 1.66 tons per acre, with an average of 0.55 tons. (Khorramdel, IFOAM) • The quality of the farming practices studied was variable, especially for the row crop trials. Virtually all the row crop studies reporting significant gains were those using manure or compost instead of chemical Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? 9 fertilizers. But the extent to which other principles of carbon building -- such as keeping the soil covered with plants at all times, using a broad mix of cover crops, and minimizing tillage -- were used is not clear. It is noteworthy, however, that in the case of the high-est reported row crop carbon gain, restoring 1.66 tons per acre of corn, the trial used organic no-till practices. (Khorramdel) Given these trial averages, let’s do some back-of-the-envelope calculations about the potential of agriculture to restore 106.25 Gt of carbon to the soil. The FAO says there are 8.3 billion acres of grasslands on the globe and 3.8 billion acres of cropland. If every-one were willing to use carbon-building practices on those acres annually the grasslands, at an average of 2.6 tons per acre, could restore 21.6 Gt and the croplands, at an average of 0.55 tons per acre, could restore 2.1 Gt. This gives us a total of 23.7 gigatons per year. Since we are interested in restoring 106.25 Gt, that means we could do it in under 5 years! Stable Carbon Of course if we want to restore a large amount of car-bon to the soil it has to be done so that microbes can’t consume it. Otherwise they will eventually just burn it up and give it off as carbon dioxide to the atmosphere again. Many studies have analyzed treatments for soil organic matter to see if they helped preserve it. One 10-year study compared incorporating organic matter residues in one plot and removing them from a similar plot. Another one lasted for 31 years and compared different rotations and fertilizer applications in differ-ent plots, varying by up to 50% the amount of carbon returned to the soil. A third compared a plot where crop residues were burned for many years to another plot where the residues were incorporated into the soil. At the end of each of these studies, researchers measuring soil organic matter could find no significant differences among the plots despite the differences in management. (Kirkby) If microbes will just multiply and consume whatever carbon is present, we can never build higher levels in the soil. And yet, historically, soil organic matter levels of 6 to 10% were common, and in places as much as 20% was measured. (LaSalle) What has kept soil or-ganisms from decomposing organic matter in the past? One form of carbon that seems to remain stable for years, even centuries, is humus. It is composed of complex molecules containing carbon, but is not easily broken down by soil life. Scientists are not entirely in agreement on how humus is formed, or how it resists decomposition. Some believe that humus is a highly recalcitrant form of carbon formed by the microbial decomposition of roots and root products. (Ontl) Others believe that the mechanisms enabling physical preservation of soil carbon involve either its ability to resist attack by microbial enzymes through “adsorp-tion” onto minerals, or protection within soil aggre-gates. The former suggests chemical bonding to clay particles or soil colloids strong enough to resist attack by threatening enzymes. The latter might protect the molecules from an enzyme attack by keeping oxygen or other decomposing elements out of the soil aggre-gate. Still another theory involves the inaccessibility of the soil carbon to microbial attack because of its depth within the soil. (Dungait) A view is developing among some scientists, however, that stable carbon is produced not from residues of soil organic matter but from liquid carbon itself. This view sees humus as a built-up creation by soil organisms, rather than a product of decomposing organic matter. (Meléndrez, Jones letter) Studies supporting this view suggest that humus is an organo-mineral complex composed of about 60% carbon, between 6% and 8% nitrogen, and chemically linked to soil minerals including phosphorus, sulfur, iron and aluminum. There is even some evidence that the composition of humus is based on specific ratios among its main components, not only between car-bon and nitrogen but also between carbon and sulfur. (Kirkby) One researcher maintains that humus can only form in specialized soil microsites, like aggregates, where nitrogen is being actively fixed and phosphorus and sulfur are being solubilized, (Jones letter) How Can We Restore and Stabilize Soil Carbon? As soil scientists learn more about the components and microbial processes that form humus we will have a better understanding of how to assist its creation. But there is evidence suggesting that building soil organic matter is not just a job of adding organic matter to your soil. That will create a thriving microbial community and can make crops flourish. But to build long term carbon, you need to do more. What we need to know is: what practices do we need to use to build and keep soil carbon in our soil? Keep Soil Planted Probably the most important single lesson is that bare soil oxidizes carbon, while plants protect it. Green 10 Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? plants form a barrier between air and soil, slowing the process of carbon emission by microbes. Erosion by wind and water is also a major enemy of soil carbon, and growing plants are your best protection against erosion. Finally, plants not only protect soil carbon but also add to it through their power of photosynthesis. Put simply, every square foot of soil that is left exposed -- whether it is between rows of crops, because you are tilling up a field, or have just harvested a crop and are leaving the land to fallow -- reduces your carbon bank account. Practices like winter vegetation to cover the soil and under-sowing with legumes and cover crops are impor-tant so that after the crop is taken there is a productive cover to increase soil carbon, protect against erosion, feed soil organisms and increase aggregation. (Azeez) Minimize Tillage One of the most difficult carbon restoration practices for organic growers to adopt is to reduce tillage. Since organic growers don’t use herbicides, tillage of the soil is their major weapon against weeds. But tillage does several detrimental things. First, it stirs up soil and ex- poses it to the air, oxidizing the carbon in the exposed soil. Second, tillage rips up and destroys the hyphae of mycorrhizal fungi, the microbes responsible for much of the symbiosis that is so important for plant vigor and increased exudation of liquid carbon. Their hyphae are the delicate network strands that permeate the soil and carry water and nutrients to plant roots. Studies report increases in fungal biomass at all sites where tillage is reduced. (Six) Third, the complex soil aggregates that have been built up of microbial exudates to protect important chemical transformations such as nitrogen fixing and carbon stabilization will be ruined by till-age. Fourth, tillage tends to destroy the pore spaces in the soil that are vital for holding air and water, which enable microbial vitality. Finally, tillage itself often involves equipment that is powered by fossil fuels, releasing greenhouse gases in their operation. Studies report that the organic cropping systems with the highest levels of carbon restoration are those practicing no-till and adding plenty of organic matter -- such as cow manure -- to the soil. (Khorramdel) Crit-ics of tillage report that even one tillage operation after several years can result in loss of most of the carbon built up during that time. (Lal 2007) Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? 11 There are some studies that report that the soil carbon gains of no-till are not distributed deeply through the soil profile, but rather occur mostly near the surface. This is a problem, they suggest, because the best chance for humus formation and long-term carbon stabilization seems to be deeper in the soil, closer to clay and minerals to which the carbon can bond to resist oxidation. They also argue that the kind of soil organic matter produced under no-till management is only incorporated in the sand/soil fraction of the soil near the surface and is easily oxidized upon eventual disturbance. (Azeez) Some studies that point to the shallowness of organic matter build-up under no-till, however, also report a slow deepening of soil organic matter after 10 to 15 years under the system, presumably because of both decreased organic matter decomposition and long term soil mixing by larger soil organisms. (Powlson) There are several systems and devices that are currently being designed for organic growers to reduce tillage. Planters are available that open the soil only enough for the seed or seedling to be deposited, and close it right up again afterward. Roller-crimpers have been de-signed which roll over and crimp a long stemmed cover crop before flowering, killing it but not disturbing the soil. The market crop is then planted right into the stubble of the cover. Doubtless many other good ideas for enabling organic farmers to fight weeds while not disturbing the soil will be developed. There is certainly a need for more progress on this front. An alternative method of controlling weeds is the use of mulch to prevent light from reaching them. The simplest mulches to apply are sheets of plastic. Their production, however, usually requires fossil fuels and removal can be difficult and time consuming. Mulch-ing with organic materials such as hay or shredded crop residue adds decomposing organic matter to the soil and builds carbon, but in biologically active soils requires continual additions of material which can be costly and time-consuming. The primary drawback to mulching, however, is that it does not take carbon from the atmosphere and fix it into the soil via photosynthe-sis, as living plants do. Cover Crops Cover crops are essential in any organic strategy to re-duce or eliminate tillage, control weeds, and build soil carbon. Ideal candidates for cover crops can be killed (by frost, mowing, crushing) before flowering, so they don’t produce seeds and become weeds themselves. Their photosynthesis is an important source of soil car-bon while living, and their biomass becomes available after they die. Legumes are important in the cover crop mix, as are deep-rooted plants like annual ryegrass or cereal rye that bring nutrients from deep in the soil and add nitrogen and carbon back to those lower levels. Besides increasing soil carbon, cover crops reduce ni-trogen leaching and discourage wind and water erosion. They improve soil structure, increase water infiltration and reduce evaporation. They also provide higher lev-els of lignin than most cultivated crops, thus supporting mycorrhizal fungal growth and fungal products such as glomalin that promote soil particle binding. (Rodale, Azeez) Diversity and Crop Rotation One of the keys to supporting the microbial life in the soil is to encourage diversity. One principle of nature seems to be that the more biodiversity there is in a system, the healthier and more resilient it is. This is also true when building soil carbon. (Lal 2004) Below ground, biodiversity enables every microbe to fill a niche in the food web – fungi, algae, bacteria, earth-worms, termites, ants, nematodes, dung beetles, etc. Above ground, monocultures invite pests and disease where crop diversity keeps infestations from growing and spreading. This applies to both crops and to cover crops, which should contain many plants of different types – broad leaf and grass, legumes and non-legumes, cool and warm weather, wet and dry. No matter what the conditions, some should be able to thrive and pho-tosynthesize. “Cocktail cover crops” are mixes of many varieties of cover crop seed and are now available for purchase to guarantee biodiversity. Crop rotations also help benefit biodiversity. Rotations with continuous cover crops eliminate the need for fal-low periods to refresh the land and increase the activ-ity of soil enzymes. Microbial biomass is larger when legumes are included in the rotation. (Six) Grazing ruminants are also a common way for organic farms to improve soil organic matter levels. The graz-ing itself promotes the growth, then sloughing off, of grass roots -- which provides carbon to feed hungry soil microbes. Pastures and perennial systems, if properly managed, can show rapid increases in organic matter. Animal manure is one of the most valuable products of the small mixed farm, rich as it is in both carbon and the living microbes that inoculate soil with biological diversity. 12 Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? No Chemicals The use of synthetic agricultural chemicals is destruc-tive of soil carbon. Toxins like pesticides are lethal to soil organisms, which play a crucial role in enhancing plant vitality and photosynthesis. Fertilizers have also been shown to deplete soil organic matter. In the Ro-dale Institute’s Compost Utilization Trials using com-posted manure with crop rotations for ten years resulted in carbon gains of up to 1.0 ton/acre/year. The use of synthetic fertilizers without rotations, however, resulted in carbon losses of 0.15 ton/acre/year. (LaSalle) The Morrow Plots at the University of Illinois were the site of one of the longest running controlled farm trials in history. Researchers analyzed data from 50 years in which fields on which a total of from 90 to 124 tons of carbon residue per acre had been added, but which also used synthetic nitrogen fertilization. Those plots actu-ally lost almost 5 tons of soil organic matter per acre over the trial period. (Khan) One suggested cause of the negative impact of syn-thetic fertilizer on soil carbon is the fact that it tends to reduce the size and depth of plant roots since it is concentrated in a shallow layer at the soil surface rather than spread throughout the soil as would be nutri-ents from legumes, minerals or other natural sources. (Azeez) Another reason might be the impact on the plant of absorbing ammonium ions which causes it to release hydrogen ions, which acidify the soil. (Hep-perly) A third possibility is that the availability of free nitrogen causes the plant to exude less liquid carbon to obtain nitrogen from microbes. If you have been using synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, however, and want to stop doing so it may be wise to cut back gradually over three or four years because it will take time for nitrogen-fixing bacteria to build up in your soil. Stop-ping cold turkey may result in disappointing yields the first year. (Jones SOS ) Pasture We have noted earlier that proper pasturing is a highly effective method of agriculture to restore soil carbon. A recent study of land converted from row cropping to management intensive grazing showed a remarkable carbon accumulation of 3.24 tons/acre/year. This is in the range of deep-rooted African grasses planted to savannas in South America that achieved rates of 2.87 tons of carbon/acre/year. (Machmuller) Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? 13 Part of the efficiency of pastures at fixing carbon is probably related to the fact that several grasses use the C4 photosynthetic chemical pathway, which evolved separately from the more usual C3 pathway. Particularly adapted to situations of low water, high light and high temperature, C4 photosynthesis is responsible for some 25 to 30% of all carbon fixation on land, despite being used by only 3% of the flowering plants. (Muller) Some people are concerned about raising large numbers of ruminant animals because in the process of diges-tion they employ bacteria in their rumen that give off methane, a greenhouse gas that the animal then exhales. In an ecological setting this is no problem as methano-trophic bacteria, which live in a wide variety of habitats and feed solely on methane, will quickly metabolize it. In fact, after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, some 220,000 tons of methane bubbled to the surface but were quickly consumed by an exploding population of methanotrophic bacteria. It is only when ruminants are away from biologically active soil or water, such as in feedlots or on soil to which synthetic chemicals have been heavily applied, that ruminant methane emissions can be of concern. (Jones SOS) Forests Converting degraded soils to forest use has been pro-posed as a way to enhance soil carbon. As with other plants, the rate of forest soil carbon restoration depends on climate, soil type, species and nutrient management. The studies we have found on soil carbon in forests generally show modest gains in soil carbon or, in some cases, a net loss. (Lal 2004) There are some, however, that suggest proper management of woody plants can also deliver sizeable soil carbon gains. (Quinkenstein) Also, reforestation can lead in other ways to climate moderation and water cycle restoration. Biochar The potential for use of charred residues to enhance soil fertility while restoring carbon to the soil has recently gained a lot of attention. Pointing to the terra preta soils of the Amazon, anthropogenic dark earths enriched with char more than 800 years ago, propo-nents cite the high fertility these soils have even today. Other char-containing soils are Mollisols, grassland derived soils extensive in North America, the Ukraine, Russia, Argentina and Uruguay that produce a signifi-cant portion of global grain harvests. The char in these soils has been attributed to grassland fires that occurred long ago. The actual chemistry of these char residues has only recently been investigated. Their stability and fertility may be related to protective habitats their inter- nal spaces provide for microbes, or to char’s molecular structure, which creates a large cation exchange capac-ity (ability to hold ions of minerals needed for plant nutrition). (Mao) Although biochar has not been extensively studied, researchers suggest that biomass carbon converted to biochar can sequester about 50% of its initial carbon in the soil for long periods, leading to a more stable and long-lasting soil carbon than would be the case from direct land application of uncharred carbon. (Dungait) Of course any conversion of carbon to biochar must in-volve a life cycle assessment concerning the source of the carbon, its land use implications, and the energy of processing and applying it. There are some indications, however, that biochar is a good way to confer addi-tional stability to labile, or easily broken down, organic matter in soil. (Powlson) Benefits of Restoring Carbon to Soil The advantages of building organic matter in your soil are not limited to removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Water Increasing soil carbon builds aggregates, which in turn act as sponges to enable soil to hold water, thus provid-ing reserves to plant roots in times when precipitation is low and a ready sink to soak up excess in times when it is high. This capacity to retain water also reduces the risk of erosion and can result in improved crop quality and yield. Some growers believe that companion plants or a cover crop will use up all available water or nutri-ents. To the contrary, supporting soil microbes with a diversity of plants actually improves the crop’s nutrient acquisition and water retention. (Jones SOS) Interestingly, since the 1930s the mean maximum and minimum water levels of the Mississippi River have gotten more extreme – flood levels are higher and low river levels are lower. This happens because the water cannot infiltrate the soil as it should. With good infiltration some water supplies plant production and some flows slowly through the soil to feed springs and streams which bring a long lasting base flow to river systems. But if groundcover is poor, soil aggregation diminishes and water cannot infiltrate well. Thus in floods water runs along the surface and erodes soils, and in droughts there is no supply retained in the soil for either plants or maintaining flow to springs and streams. (Jones SOS) 14 Soil Carbon Restoration: Can Biology do the Job? Fungal Dominance Scientists are finding that a high ratio of fungi to bac-teria in soil is very important to plant production. You can tell if you have such a ratio by the aroma of a hand-ful of soil – if it is mushroomy, not sour. It is the fungi that seek out and supply water and nutrients to plant roots as needed. Unfortunately, most of our agricultural soils are bacterially dominant, rather than fungally dominant. But practices that avoid bare soil, do not till, use cover crops of many species, and encourage high density but short duration grazing with significant rest periods are moving soil toward fungal dominance. Better Crops Plants, just like animals, have evolved complex defens-es against enemies. Their mechanisms are many, and clever. Some avoid detection by adopting visual de-fenses such as mimicking other plants or camouflaging themselves. Some make attack difficult by putting on armor such as thick cell walls, waxy cuticles, or hard bark. Some deter predation by use of thorns, spines, or sticky gum-like exudates. Many synthesize second-ary metabolites to prevent attacks chemically (poisons, repellants, irritants, or even volatile organic compounds that attract the enemies of the plant’s predator). (Wink) Plants also engage in symbiotic relations with bacteria that are able to inhibit local pathogens and thus defend plants against attack. Such abilities, just as is the case with immune systems in animals, are strongest when the plant is healthy. That health is optimal when the needs of the plant for sun-light, nutrition, water, oxygen, and carbon dioxide are fully met. And of course that happens best in healthy soil with a high carbon content and a diverse and large population of microbes. Those conditions can lead to crops with nutrient density, resistance to pests and diseases, more antioxidants and longer shelf life. (Gosling, Wink, Reganold) Plants that are not held back by disease or predation and have their nutrient needs met are going to thrive and give abundant yields. Also, healthy plants biosyn-thesize more of the volatile molecules and higher me-tabolites that produce the flavors and aromas of food crops. So restoring carbon to soils is a way to benefit all: farmers with larger yields, gardeners with tastier crops, and consumers with healthier food. Conclusion Using biology to restore organic matter to soils and stabilize it is not only beneficial to those who man-age land and crops but is also vital to our society. We have taken too much carbon from the soil, burned it, and sent it into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. Even were we to stop burning fossil fuels tomorrow, the greenhouse gases already released will continue to raise global temperatures and set free more harmful gases many years into the future. If we want to survive we really have no alternative but to restore carbon to the soil. That this can be done through biology, using a method that has worked for millions of years, is exciting. Farmers, gardeners, homeowners, landscapers -- anyone who owns or manages land -- can follow these simple principles and not only restore carbon to the soil but help rebuild the marvelous system that nature has put in place to renew our atmosphere while providing food, beauty and health for all creation. 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Science Briefs, Goddard Institute for Space Studies NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), What is Ocean Acidification? http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/ Nichols K, Millar J, (2013) Glomalin and Soil Aggregation under Six Management Systems in the Northern Great Plains, USA, Open Journal of Soil Science, Vol 3, No. 8, pp. 374-378, NSIDC, (2015) Methane and Frozen Ground, National Snow and Ice Data Center, https://nsidc.org/cryosphere/frozenground/meth-ane.html Ontl TA, Schulte LA (2012) Soil Carbon Storage, Nature Education Knowledge, 3(10):35 Peterson TC, Stott PA, Herring SC, Hoerling MP, (2013) Explain-ing Extreme Events of 2012 from a Climate Perspective, Special Supplement to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Vol. 9, No. 9 Powlson DS, Whitmore AP, Goulding WT, (2011) Soil carbon sequestration to mitigate climate change: a critical re-examination to identify the true and the false, European Journal of Soil Science, 62, 42-55 Quinkenstein A, Böhm C, da Silva Matos E, Freese D, Hüttl RF, (2011) Assessing the carbon sequestration in short rotation coppices of Robinia pseudoacacia L. on marginal sites in northeast Germany, in Carbon Sequestration Potential of Agroforestry Systems: Op-portunities and Challenges, 201, Kumar BM and Nair PKR (editors) Advances in Agroforestry 8 Reganold JP, Andrews PK, Reeve JR, Carpenter-Boggs L, Schadt CW, Alldredge JR, Ross CF, Davies NM, Zhou J, (2010) Fruit and soil quality of organic and conventional strawberry agroecosystems, PLos One 5(10): 10-1371, Oct 6, 2010 Rodale (2014) Regenerative Organic Agriculture and Climate Change: A Down-to-Earth Solution to Global Warming, www.rodaleinstitute.org RSC (Royal Society of Chemistry), Rate of Photosynthesis: limiting factors, http://www.rsc.org/learn-chemistry/content/filerepository/CMP/00/001/068/Rate%20of%20photosynthesis%20limiting%20factors.pdf SAPS (Science and Plants for Schools), Measuring the rate of photosynthesis, (2015) http://www.saps.org.uk/secondary/teaching-resources/157-measuring-the-rate-of-photosynthesis Six J, Frey SD, Thiet RK, Batten KM, (2006) Bacterial and fungal contributions to carbon sequestration in agroecosystems, Soil Sci-ence Society of America Journal 70:555–569 Timmusk S, Grantcharova N, Wagner EGH, (2005) Applied and Environmental Microbiology, Nov. 2005, P. 7292-7300 Velivelli SLS, (2011) How can bacteria benefit plants? Doctoral research at University College Cork, Ireland, published in The Boolean Walker TS, Bais HP, Grotewold E, Vivanco JM, (2003) Root Exudation and Rhizosphere Biology, Plant Physiology vol. 132, no. 1, 44-51 Wink M (1988) Plant breeding: importance of plant secondary metabolites for protection against pathogens and herbivores, Theor. Appl. Genet. (1988) 75:225-233 For more information on restoring soil carbon: www.nofamass.org/carbon Our poor Earth. Fortunately for us, there’s a solution -- and it’s right underneath our feet Organic farming is here to save us! TA-DAH! Good soil management helps promote the growth of healthy plants that absorb sunlight. Plants then use their own chlorophyll along with carbon dioxide and water to produce -- carbohydrates! Some of the sugars in these ‘liquid’ carbohydrates are ‘leaked’ or exuded down through the roots and, like magic, attract hungry microbes in the ground -- like bacteria and fungi. Together, green plants and organisms in the ground protect and promote each other’s health. Best of all, this process locks the carbon into organic matter, can create humus in the soil (learn how in this paper) and... ...that keeps our planet healthy! Day after day, carbon dioxide gas is pumped into the air, warming up our planet and threatening our environment. illustrations by John Sherffius The Deer in Your Yard Are Here to Stay The deer population of the eastern U.S. has exploded and cities are trying to keep it in check. But the options available to them are limited, and fraught. CityLab • Amanda Kolson Hurley A decade ago, deer were a rare sight on Staten Island. White-tailed deer are thought to have abandoned the island in the late 19th century, pushed by human development to open land in nearby New Jersey. In 2008, the estimated deer population of the 60-square-mile borough of New York City was only 24. Then the deer came back, swimming across the Arthur Kill and Raritan Bay from New Jersey in search of new habitat. And they reproduced—boy, did they reproduce. An aerial survey of the deer population in 2014 put it at 793. By 2017, the new estimate was between 1,918 and 2,188, an increase of 9,000 percent in just nine years. To various degrees, towns and cities across the Northeast have been seeing an ongoing resurgence of deer populations in recent decades, as suburbanization patterns deepened and hunting practices faded. If you live anywhere outside of an urban downtown, you’ve probably noticed this trend yourself. Deer are cute. We’ve all cried watching Bambi. So what’s the problem? Well, there are a few. Hungry deer will eat (or trample) almost anything in a garden, becoming a pest for urban and suburban homeowners. Over-browsing by deer depletes the undergrowth of woodland, threatening birds’ habitat and the regeneration of trees. And when deer wander into the road, the results are not so cute. There are about 1.25 million collisions between cars and deer, elk, and moose annually in the United States, according to the insurer State Farm, and these cause around 150 human fatalities, and countless animal deaths, each year. They also harbor the insects that carry Lyme Disease, which is on the rise: Reported cases have tripled since the early 1990s, and the true incidence may be 10 times higher, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The black- legged tick that carries Lyme is commonly called the deer tick, and deer are the main reproductive hosts for adult ticks, but ticks do not become infected with Lyme from the deer—that happens earlier in the tick’s life cycle, usually from feeding on white-footed mice. (Scientific opinions on the exact relationship between deer density and Lyme prevalence vary considerably.) The explosion of deer across the eastern U.S. has prompted some cities and towns to cull them. Ann Arbor, Michigan, recently carried out a combined sharpshooting cull and sterilization of does (who give birth to one to three fawns a year during a life span of up to 10 years, which explains how their numbers increase so fast). Mount Lebanon, Pennsylvania, a Pittsburgh suburb, has tried archery culls and sharpshooting hunts, but as of October 2016, the town was still experiencing a spike in deer-vehicle collisions. Other municipalities hope local hunters can help. Charlottesville, Virginia, is finalizing a new ordinance that will allow bow- hunting of deer on private land on lots of half an acre and up. Mike Murphy, an assistant city manager, says deer have been a regular topic of discussion among residents for the past several years. “I think part of that is certainly about ornamental damage—people who are concerned about their yard or garden,” Murphy says. “Part of it is folks concerned about ticks and public health, and whether there’s a relationship to having deer in their yard. And of course there is some documentation that we were having increased collisions with deer, a traffic safety issue.” Despite all the local efforts to bring deer numbers down, residents of deer-thronged neighborhoods shouldn’t expect things to change much any time soon. First, one reason the North American deer population is growing is the near-elimination of their main predators, wolves and cougars. Second, as suburban-style development continues to spread haphazardly across the land, deer aren’t crashing our party—we’re effectively inviting them over for hors d’oeuvres. “Deer are what we consider an edge species,” says David Drake, a wildlife specialist at the University of Wisconsin– Madison. “Any place where you have two or more vegetation types come together—a wooded area and a residential neighborhood or field—that’s a vegetation edge. If you think about suburban areas, or any area developed for humans, there’s a lot of habitat fragmentation going on.” Deer aren’t happy in the deep forest—most food in forests is too high for them to reach. They prefer “edge habitat”—the forest fringes, where trees give way to grasslands. Or, say, where a subdivision abuts the woods. The typical American suburb, with its mix of ornamental shrubs, lawns, and small patches of trees, makes a pretty ideal deer factory. And grazing in suburban yards has another benefit for deer, Drake points out: Unlike in the real woods, homeowners typically replant the vegetation they eat, so they can return and eat it again. “You have this big conveyer belt of food in suburban areas,” Drake says. As recreational hunting has declined sharply, overpopulation has become a serious issue for many towns, and none of the current non-lethal methods for managing deer come without significant drawbacks. Sterilization is judged to be cost- prohibitive by many municipalities that consider it (it can cost upwards of $2,500 per head). Birth-control vaccines require a second-year booster shot, so the teams administering them have to track the deer down again a year later. The vaccines are also less effective than sterilization, and not a whole lot cheaper. Tony DeNicola knows the methods firsthand. DeNicola is the president of White Buffalo, a Connecticut nonprofit that many cities have contracted with to carry out deer culls and sterilization or birth-control programs. White Buffalo did the sharpshoot and sterilization in Ann Arbor and the archery cull and sharpshoot in Mount Lebanon. It just performed vasectomies on 720 bucks in Staten Island in an effort to curtail the deer boom there. “The evolution of options had been brutally slow,” says DeNicola, a Ph.D-holding wildlife biologist who founded White Buffalo in 1995. “It’s just because it’s wildlife. There’s not a lot of resources available for R&D.” But a better vaccine would not necessarily be a silver bullet, he says. “You start with the politics. First, you have to get over the problem of someone having the wherewithal to kill or impact deer. Then you go from that hurdle to, ‘Oh jeez, it’s really expensive.’ Then you hope you don’t get a lawsuit from a faction that creates further delays or obstacles for politicians, who don’t like friction.” When culls are arranged, protests from animal rights advocates often follow. In January, two dozen protesters marched across the University of Michigan campus in Ann Arbor with “Stop the Shoot” signs. (The university had offered to help fund the cull and allowed sharpshooters on its property.) Other protests have erupted in Shaker Heights, Ohio (a Cleveland suburb), Canton, Massachusetts, near Boston, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere. DeNicola says he’s been sued eight times and received death threats for his work. Animal-rights advocates aren’t the only ones who line up against deer culls: Sport hunters will sometimes object to the practice if they believe it will dramatically reduce the local deer population, he says. Lethal culls in highly populated areas are tricky. Discharging firearms is dangerous in dense neighborhoods and illegal in many jurisdictions, like New York City. That leaves archery, which poses a very low risk to human bystanders. (“It’s literally been decades since there’s been a fatality from an archery incident” in Virginia, Charlottesville’s Murphy notes.) But bow hunting is difficult, and DeNicola is skeptical that about its effectiveness. “People think they can just have a bunch of bow hunters show up and manage deer. It’s a falsehood.” He also says that archery can end up being less humane than firearm hunts, since deer wounded with arrows may not die right away. The Humane Society of the United States opposes lethal deer control as both inhumane and ineffective. Among its tips to prevent human-deer conflict are for gardeners to switch to deer-resistant plants and use repellents, and for cities and states to put up fences that stop deer from crossing roads. In Hastings-on-Hudson, New York, the society is piloting the birth control vaccine PZP-22 in a deer herd. A similar trial on Fire Island reduced deer numbers. Hastings officials don’t expect to see a measurable reduction in the herd’s size for five to 10 years. In the meantime, the treated deer will still be carrying ticks, gnawing shrubs, and wandering onto busy roads. Weighing the complicated pros and cons of each measure, and the political blowback, causes most officials who contact him to reconsider, DeNicola says. “With ninety-five percent of them, once they realize the politics and the cost, it’s: ‘I guess I’ll just keep living with the deer.’” Not everyone will be unhappy about that. For every Staten Island homeowner who gets annoyed when a deer crashes through his yard and takes down a tree, there’s another who feeds them out of his hand. How many deer are too many is largely in the eye of the beholder. Whatever their feelings about their hooved neighbors, Americans in deer-rich places will be coexisting with them for the foreseeable future. If you plant tulips (a deer favorite) in your garden, expect to have company. Amanda Kolson Hurley is a senior editor at CityLab.