Carbon sequestration refers to the process of capture and long term storage of the atmospheric carbon dioxide. The carbon sink refers to the natural or artificial reservoir that accumulates and stores some carbon-containing chemical compound for an indefinite period.
This is simple. It is "Plants".
Soil carbon sequestration is a process that is being used to try to to 'store' all the extra carbon that is being released into the atmosphere. There are lots of different ideas about how to do it. One way they are trying to do is by turning biomass into charcoal (which retains the CO2). The charcoal is then plowed into agricultural soil, burying the carbon dioxide.
Only if it is sequestered in the ocean. Carbon sequestration usually means storing the carbon dioxide underground in permanent water-and gas-tight reservoirs. This is a bold plan, but it has not yet been done successfully.
Carbon dioxide can get back into the soil through a process known as carbon sequestration. This can occur when plants absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and then store some of that carbon in the soil through their roots or when organic matter decomposes into the soil, releasing carbon dioxide in the process.
Ralph Fitzgerand has written: 'Geologic carbon dioxide storage' -- subject(s): Geological carbon sequestration
Reduction in carbon dioxide levels can be caused by increased photosynthesis from plants, as they use carbon dioxide to produce oxygen. It can also be a result of carbon sequestration practices that remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store it in the ground or oceans. Additionally, decreased human activities like burning fossil fuels can lead to a reduction in carbon dioxide emissions.
It offsets all the carbon we and other animals in the ecosystem exhale. Carbon from the emitted carbon dioxide is taken and used for energy (glucose) production in plants. These plants emit oxygen as waste which we inhale and use for metabolism. This is essentially the carbon and oxygen cycle in our ecosystem but there are other major players as well as other important cycles (like the water and nitrogen cycles) that are intertwined with carbon sequestration. Additionally, carbon sequestration is responsible for lowering atmospheric carbon monoxide levels as well as methane and carbon dioxide levels; two important greenhouse gases.
Carbon sequestration is part of the carbon cycle, so it could be said that is where it occurs. The carbon cycle refers to the circulation of carbon atoms in the biosphere.
Carbon dioxide is naturally absorbed (through photosynthesis) and stored in trees and vegetation. It is also absorbed and stored in the oceans.
because when you breathe in oxygen it comes back out as carbon dioxide so if more trees are being cut down (deforestation) then how will we produce carbon dioxide because we don't have no oxygen. The whole point is oxygen comes from trees.
This is an example of the natural process known as carbon sequestration, where the oceans act as a sink by absorbing excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. This helps mitigate the impact of increased carbon dioxide levels on the climate and ocean acidification.