Variation in soil organic carbon stocks in Singapore with forest succession and land management

Author:

Kleine Michael,Ghosh Subhadip,Leitgeb ErnstORCID,Berger Ambros,Ibrahim Hassan bin,Gschwantner Thomas,Ow Lai Fern,Michel Kerstin

Abstract

AbstractLand-use changes and forest management decisions can profoundly alter soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks. Therefore, the objective of this study was to investigate whether existing SOC stocks in the forests of Singapore can be related to successional stages of forest vegetation following disturbances. A forest classification system was developed using information about land use history and vegetation data from 21 inventory plots collected within the framework of Singapore’s IPCC-compatible greenhouse gas reporting system. The forest successional classes obtained were related to SOC stocks (0–50 cm) determined on the same plots. The inventory plots were assigned to four classes. Primary forests (Class 1) were dominated by late succession native species. Secondary forests representing natural forest succession (Class 2) contained younger native trees and a few large trees. Secondary forests after tree plantation/fruit orchard (Class 3) and after agricultural crop cultivation (Class 4) were characterised by large proportions of exotic tree species. Maximum stocks of SOC declined from Class 1 (127.7 Mg ha−1) to Class 4 (35.2 Mg ha−1). The results of a principal component analysis confirmed our forest classification. Plant-related parameters can be successfully used to classify the forests in Singapore, which also show clear differences in SOC.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference44 articles.

1. Defence Science and Technology Agency (2009) Geology of Singapore. P. (Defence Science and Technology Agency, Ed.). Singapore.

2. Conversion of tropical moist forest into cacao agroforest: consequences for carbon pools and annual C sequestration

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