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An ancient stone carving of the Maya God Pauahtun, taken at Copan Ruinas, Honduras (Image: Peter Douglas/SWNS) Carbon reserves in Central American soils are still affected by the trees they
were chopping down more than 1,000 years ago. The downfall of the mysterious people who flourished in the steamy jungles of present-day southern Mexico, Belize and Guatemala has been debated
for years. Climate change has been blamed. Trees use sunlight to absorb CO2 from the atmosphere through photosynthesis and store it as carbon in the form of wood. The study of sediments
from three lakes supports this theory. RELATED ARTICLES It shows the amount of time the greenhouse gas remained stored in soils in Guatemala and the Yucatan Peninsula was shortened by
deforestation undertaken by the Maya. The findings, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, suggest logging in rainforests today could affect the ability of the underlying soils to
sequester carbon. Mayans began farming around 4,000 years ago and the spread of agriculture and building of cities eventually led to widespread deforestation and soil erosion. But the
international team was shocked the soils in the region haven't fully recovered as carbon sinks in over a millennium of reforestation,They say it underlines the importance of protecting
the rainforests as the soils could take thousands of years to recover. DRAMATIC FOOTAGE SHOWS IMPACT DEFORESTATION HAS ON ORANGUTANS Study lead author Professor Peter Douglas, of McGill
University in Canada, said: "When you go to this area today much of it looks like dense, old-growth rainforest. "But when you look at soil carbon storage, it seems the ecosystem
was fundamentally changed - and never returned to its original state." His researchers assessed changes in the lengths of time carbon persisted in soils in the Maya Lowlands over the
last 3,500 years. They did this by determining the ages of waxes produced by plant leaves and preserved at the bottom of three lakes in southern Mexico and Guatemala. They found this
decreased during periods of intensive land use - and began to recover as Maya population density fell and some regions began using soil management practices. Researchers sampling lake
sediment in one of the three lakes in Guatemala (Image: Mark Brenner/SWNS) But the carbon durations never recovered to the levels seen prior to deforestation. This suggests these soils were
less able to sequester carbon even after the overlying vegetation recovered - long after ancient cities were abandoned and the forests grew back. In addition, the authors find that
deforestation over the past 150 years has further reduced soil carbon persistence at some of the study sites. It highlights how important soils and our treatment of them could be in
determining future levels of greenhouse gases in the planet's atmosphere. The Ancient Maya Classic age - the peak of their culture - occurred between 300 and 900 A.D. before they went
into a mysterious decline. Authors find that deforestation over the past 150 years has further reduced soil carbon persistence (Image: GETTY) RELATED ARTICLES At the end of this period,
something happened to cause people to flee the limestone cities of pyramids. Soil is one of the largest storehouses of carbon on Earth - containing at least twice as much carbon as
today's atmosphere. Yet scientists have very little understanding of how soil carbon reservoirs change on timescales longer than a decade or so. The study suggests these reservoirs can
change dramatically on timescales spanning centuries or even millennia. Prof Douglas said: "This offers another reason - adding to a long list - to protect the remaining areas of
old-growth tropical forests in the world. Carbon durations never recovered to the levels seen prior to deforestation (Image: GETTY) "It could also have implications for how we design
things like carbon offsets, which often involve reforestation but don't fully account for the long-term storage of carbon." Carbon offsets enable companies or individuals to offset
their greenhouse-gas emissions by purchasing credits from environmental project -, such as tree-planting. Prof Douglas said in future "it would be great to analyse tropical forests in
other regions of the world to see if the same patterns emerge - and to see if past human deforestation and agriculture had an impact on soil carbon reservoirs globally." He said:
"I'm also very interested in applying this technique to permafrost regions in Canada to see what happened to carbon stored in permafrost during previous periods of climate
change."