Damage to living trees contributes to almost half of the biomass losses in tropical forests

Author:

Zuleta Daniel1ORCID,Arellano Gabriel23ORCID,McMahon Sean M.14ORCID,Aguilar Salomón5,Bunyavejchewin Sarayudh6ORCID,Castaño Nicolas7,Chang‐Yang Chia‐Hao8ORCID,Duque Alvaro9ORCID,Mitre David5,Nasardin Musalmah10,Pérez Rolando5,Sun I‐Fang11ORCID,Yao Tze Leong10,Valencia Renato12ORCID,Krishna Moorthy Sruthi M.1314ORCID,Verbeeck Hans14ORCID,Davies Stuart J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Forest Global Earth Observatory Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Washington District of Columbia USA

2. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

3. Oikobit LLC Albuquerque New Mexico USA

4. Smithsonian Environmental Research Center Edgewater Maryland 21037 USA

5. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Apartado 0843‐03092 Balboa República de Panamá

6. Department of National Parks, Forest Research Office Wildlife and Plant Conservation Bangkok 10900 Thailand

7. Herbario Amazónico Colombiano Instituto Amazónico de Investigaciones Científicas Sinchi Bogotá Colombia

8. Department of Biological Sciences National Sun Yat‐sen University Kaohsiung 80424 Taiwan

9. Departamento de Ciencias Forestales Universidad Nacional de Colombia Sede Medellín Medellín Colombia

10. Forestry and Environment Division Forest Research Institute Malaysia 52109 Kepong Selangor Malaysia

11. Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Ecology and Sustainability National Dong Hwa University Hualien 94701 Taiwan

12. Escuela de Ciencias Biológicas Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador Quito Ecuador

13. Department of Geographical Sciences University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA

14. Department of Environment Ghent University Ghent Belgium

Abstract

AbstractAccurate estimates of forest biomass stocks and fluxes are needed to quantify global carbon budgets and assess the response of forests to climate change. However, most forest inventories consider tree mortality as the only aboveground biomass (AGB) loss without accounting for losses via damage to living trees: branchfall, trunk breakage, and wood decay. Here, we use ~151,000 annual records of tree survival and structural completeness to compare AGB loss via damage to living trees to total AGB loss (mortality + damage) in seven tropical forests widely distributed across environmental conditions. We find that 42% (3.62 Mg ha−1 year−1; 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.36–5.25) of total AGB loss (8.72 Mg ha−1 year−1; CI 5.57–12.86) is due to damage to living trees. Total AGB loss was highly variable among forests, but these differences were mainly caused by site variability in damage‐related AGB losses rather than by mortality‐related AGB losses. We show that conventional forest inventories overestimate stand‐level AGB stocks by 4% (1%–17% range across forests) because assume structurally complete trees, underestimate total AGB loss by 29% (6%–57% range across forests) due to overlooked damage‐related AGB losses, and overestimate AGB loss via mortality by 22% (7%–80% range across forests) because of the assumption that trees are undamaged before dying. Our results indicate that forest carbon fluxes are higher than previously thought. Damage on living trees is an underappreciated component of the forest carbon cycle that is likely to become even more important as the frequency and severity of forest disturbances increase.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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