Suggestions for promoting SOC storage within the carbon farming framework: Analyzing the INFOSOLO database

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Abstract

The new world challenges under climate change call for eco-friendly practices that make agriculture’s economic and social dimensions compatible with environmental preservation and ecosystem resilience. Carbon farming has emerged as an interesting alternative for dealing with these new frameworks, as it promotes conservation agriculture with practices that increase carbon sequestration in soils and plants. Considering these motivations, this research intends to bring more insights into the levels of soil organic carbon (SOC) in the Portuguese context, and this variable is interrelated with land use, land attributes, and soil characteristics. Statistical information from the INFOSOLO legacy database was analyzed through statistical methodologies and machine-learning approaches. The findings provide interesting support for the stakeholders about the influence of land use and soil types on the levels of SOC.

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Cunha, C., Castanheira, N. L., Ramos, T. B., Martinho, V. J. P. D., Ferreira, A. J. D., Pereira, J. L. D. S., & Sánchez-Carreira, M. D. C. (2025). Suggestions for promoting SOC storage within the carbon farming framework: Analyzing the INFOSOLO database. Open Agriculture, 10(1), 20250433.https://doi.org/10.1515/opag-2025-0433

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This work was developed under the Science4Policy 2023 (S4P-23): annual science for policy project call, an initiative by PlanAPP – Competence Centre for Planning, Policy and Foresight in Public Administration in partnership with the Foundation for Science and Technology, financed by Portugal’s Recovery and Resilience Plan. This work is funded by National Funds through the FCT – Foundation for Science and Technology, I.P., within the scope of the project Refa UIDB/00681 (https://doi.org/10.54499/UIDP/ 00681/2020).

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© 2025 the author(s), published by De Gruyter. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Attribution 4.0 International