Mapping and Modeling the Biogeochemical Cycling of Turf Grasses in the United States
Environmental Management, Volume 36, Number 3, page 426-438 - 2005 (doi: 10.1007/s00267-004-0316-2)
Turf grasses are ubiquitous in the urban
landscape of the United States and are often associated
with various types of environmental impacts, especially on
water resources, yet there have been limited efforts to
quantify their total surface and ecosystem functioning,
such as their total impact on the continental water budget
and potential net ecosystem exchange (NEE). In this
study, relating turf grass area to an estimate of fractional
impervious surface area, it was calculated that potentially
163,800 km2 (€ 35,850 km2) of land are cultivated with turf
grasses in the continental United States, an area three
times larger than that of any irrigated crop. Using the
Biome-BGC ecosystem process model, the growth of
warm-season and cool-season turf grasses was modeled
at a number of sites across the 48 conterminous states
under different management scenarios, simulating potential
carbon and water fluxes as if the entire turf surface
was to be managed like a well-maintained lawn. The results
indicate that well-watered and fertilized turf grasses
act as a carbon sink. The potential NEE that could derive
from the total surface potentially under turf (up to 17 Tg C/
yr with the simulated scenarios) would require up to 695 to
900 liters of water per person per day, depending on the
modeled water irrigation practices, suggesting that outdoor
water conservation practices such as xeriscaping
and irrigation with recycled waste-water may need to be
extended as many municipalities continue to face
increasing pressures on freshwater.
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