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Carbon Cycling on Land
IPCC Science 2001, Figure 3.1
Last, and most important to us, we come to the carbon cycle on land.
Here we see more detail on the fate of the 120 billion tonnes of carbon absorbed annually from the atmosphere by plants to produce food for all.
Half of this food is almost immediately used by the plants themselves, returning carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Nearly another half (55 billion tonnes carbon) is co-opted by animals – of many sorts - and ultimately returned to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. Some 4 billion tonnes is consumed by fires. That leaves about 1 billion tonnes to be incorporated into soil or dissolved in water and washed down rivers to the ocean.
Now – let’s recall that overhead which deemed the 120 billion tonnes of plant carbon cycling as “natural”.  What happened to all the plants that are under human control? Is that not a human perturbation too?
Humans control a major part of earth’s vegetation. Indeed estimates suggest humans have cultivated 10 to 15% of the land surface. We can bet we have generally chosen the most productive land too. We also influence the carbon cycle through our use of forests.