Lecture 5 Flashcards
Carbon Pools in Forest Ecosystems
Rationale and Significance (4)
- Forests sequester and store carbon in trees, other vegetation, litter and soils
- Forests can help mitigate climate by sequestering carbon from the atmosphere and store it in its biomass, litter and soil
- Carbon stored varies among forest and stand types
- Hence, reliable estimates of biomass, litter and soil carbon are needed to understand the effect of forests on atmospheric carbon dioxide
BIOMASS
– the amount of organic material in three carbon pools/layers: aboveground, litter/necromass; and belowground, expressed in terms of weight (kg or ton or Mg)
– the amount of organic material in three carbon pools/layers: aboveground, litter/necromass; and belowground, expressed in terms of weight (kg or ton or Mg)
BIOMASS
CARBON POOL
a reservoir or a system which has the capacity to accumulate or release carbon. Examples are forest biomass, wood products, soils and atmosphere
a reservoir or a system which has the capacity to accumulate or release carbon. Examples are forest biomass, wood products, soils and atmosphere
CARBON POOL
CARBON POOLS 2
Schematic diagram showing the stand
level model of the carbon dynamics of
forests. Each pool is a potential atmospheric carbon sink. Respiration (Rt) and fire are pathways that lead to carbon sources. Exports and long-term human use of forest products are flows that lead to carbon sinks
Schematic diagram showing the stand
level model of the carbon dynamics of
forests. Each pool is a potential atmospheric carbon sink. Respiration (Rt) and fire are pathways that lead to carbon sources. Exports and long-term human use of forest products are flows that lead to carbon sinks
CARBON POOLS 2
estimation of carbon stock changes and noon-CO2 emissions:
major carbon pools to consider (5)
- above-ground biomass
- below-ground biomass
- dead wood
- litter
5.0 soil organic carbon