Author:
Bascietto Marco,Cherubini Paolo,Scarascia-Mugnozza Giuseppe
Abstract
Past carbon (C) storage trends were estimated using dendroecological methods in a beech chronosequence in central Germany. Raw-ring-width chronologies, sensitivity curves, and carbon uptake trends were developed for 70-, 110-, and 150-year-old (S70, S110, and S150), even-aged stands. Ecosystem C stock and net ecosystem productivity (NEPC) were computed as the sum of the C stock and fluxes of the soil, the aboveground compartment, and the estimated belowground compartment. The ecosystem C stock ranged from 216 t C·ha1 in S150, to 265 t C·ha1 in S70, to 272 in S110. NEPC values followed ecosystem C stocks, ranging from 1.7, to 2.4, to 5.1 t C·ha1·year1 for S150, S70, and S110, respectively. Stem C-stock uptake rate in S110 showed an increase in growth rate over the first 110 years of S150. We estimate that this increase in stem C stock was 6.2%. Given the constancy of forest management among the stands of the chronosequence, we hypothesize that the increase in C stock shown by S110 is due to indirect human-induced effects. We conclude that managed young forests can take advantage of increased resources and counteract the C losses at harvest that are seen in the old forests.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change
Cited by
30 articles.
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