Estimates of forest biomass carbon storage in liaoning province of Northeast China: A review and assessment

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Abstract

Accurate estimates of forest carbon storage and changes in storage capacity are critical for scientific assessment of the effects of forest management on the role of forests as carbon sinks. Up to now, several studies reported forest biomass carbon (FBC) in Liaoning Province based on data from China's Continuous Forest Inventory, however, their accuracy were still not known. This study compared estimates of FBC in Liaoning Province derived from different methods. We found substantial variation in estimates of FBC storage for young and middle-age forests. For provincial forests with high proportions in these age classes, the continuous biomass expansion factor method (CBM) by forest type with age class is more accurate and therefore more appropriate for estimating forest biomass. Based on the above approach designed for this study, forests in Liaoning Province were found to be a carbon sink, with carbon stocks increasing from 63.0 TgC in 1980 to 120.9 TgC in 2010, reflecting an annual increase of 1.9 TgC. The average carbon density of forest biomass in the province has increased from 26.2 Mg ha-1 in 1980 to 31.0 Mg ha-1 in 2010. While the largest FBC occurred in middle-age forests, the average carbon density decreased in this age class during these three decades. The increase in forest carbon density resulted primarily from the increased area and carbon storage of mature forests. The relatively long age interval in each age class for slow-growing forest types increased the uncertainty of FBC estimates by CBM-forest type with age class, and further studies should devote more attention to the time span of age classes in establishing biomass expansion factors for use in CBM calculations. © 2014 Yu et al.

Figures

  • Table 1. Major forest types in Liaoning province and forest type groups in this study.
  • Figure 1. Geographical location, forest flora, and sample sites in Liaoning province.
  • Table 2. Approaches in published studies for estimating forest biomass carbon.
  • Figure 2. (a) Forest area and growing stock in Liaoning province from 1975–2010; and (b) unit-area growing stock in Liaoning province from 1975–2010. Average unit-area growing stock in China from 1975–2005 was 84.6 m3 ha-1. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0089572.g002
  • Figure 3. Trajectory of (a) forest area; (b) growing stock; and (c) unit-area growing stock by age class in Liaoning province from 1980 to 2010. Combined mature forest includes near-mature, mature and over-mature forest. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0089572.g003
  • Table 3. Average estimate of forest biomass carbon storage (TgC) derived from different approaches based on data from 2nd–8th National Forest Inventories.
  • Table 4. Average estimates of forest biomass carbon storage (TgC) utilizing three calculation methods for equation parameters based on data from 2nd–8th National Forest Inventories.
  • Figure 4. Mean estimates of forest biomass carbon storage in Liaoning province from 1980–2010, derived from 12 published approaches of calculation and approaches established in this study (The values derived from each method represent the average estimate of two approaches by forest groups and by forest groups with age class). The median, 10th, 25th, 75th, and 90th percentiles of estimate from 12 published approaches were plotted as vertical boxes with error bars; the dash lines in the boxes are their average. The top and bottom point (solid circle) are minimum and maximum estimates. MBM: mean biomass density method CBM: continuous biomass expansion factor method; MRM: mean ratio method. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0089572.g004

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Yu, D., Wang, X., Yin, Y., Zhan, J., Lewis, B. J., Tian, J., … Dai, L. (2014, February 25). Estimates of forest biomass carbon storage in liaoning province of Northeast China: A review and assessment. PLoS ONE. Public Library of Science. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089572

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