Home  /  Forest Systems  /  Vol: 23 Núm: 1 Par: 0 (2014)  /  Article
ARTICLE
TITLE

Carbon storage as affected by different site preparation techniques two years after mixed forest stand installation

SUMMARY

Aim of study: This study aims at evaluating the impact of site preparation techniques prior to plantation on carbon storage and distribution in a young mixed stand of Pseudotsuga menziesii (PM) and Castanea sativa (CS). Area of study: The experimental field was established near Macedo de Cavaleiros, Northern Portugal, at 700 m elevation, mean annual temperature 12ºC and mean annual rainfall 678 mm. Material and Methods: The experimental layout includes three replicates, where the different treatments corresponding to different tillage intensities were randomly distributed (high, moderate and slight intensity), in plots with an area of 375 m2 each. Twenty six months after forest stand installation, samples of herbaceous vegetation (0.49 m2 quadrat), forest species (8 PM and 8 CS) and mineral soil (at 0-5, 5-15, 15-30 and 30-60 cm depth) were collected in 15 randomly selected points in each treatment, processed in laboratory and analyzed for carbon by elemental carbon analyzer. Main results: The results obtained showed that: (i) more than 90% of the total carbon stored in the system is located in the soil, increasing in depth with tillage intensity; (ii) the contribution of herbaceous vegetation and related roots to the carbon storage is very low; (iii) the amount of carbon per tree is higher in CS than in PM; (iv) the global carbon storage was affected by soil tillage generally decreasing with the increase of tillage intensity. Accordingly, carbon storage capacity as affected by the application of different site preparation techniques should be a decision support tool in afforestation schemes.Keywords: Site preparation; forest species; herbaceous vegetation; carbon storage; mineral soil; Portugal.

 Articles related

Lobna Zribi,Hatem Chaar,Abdelhamid Khaldi,Belgacem Henchi,Florent Mouillot,Fatma Gharbi    

Aim of the study. To estimate biomass and carbon accumulation in a young and disturbed forest (regenerated after a tornado) and an aged cork oak forest (undisturbed forest) as well as its distribution among the different pools (tree, litter and soil).Are... see more

Revista: Forest Systems

Suphathida Aumtong,Chakrit Chotamonsak,Bundit Somchit    

This study aimed to investigate the effect of organic rice farming on the various forms of inorganic phosphorus, the concentration of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and carbon storage, and the relationship between DOC and P fractions in organic rice farm... see more


Rafdinal RAFDINAL,Ramadanil PITOPANG,Riza LINDA,Adityo RAYNALDO,Eko SUBRATA    

In the era of intensive oil palm and rubber plantations in Kalimantan, some local communities of Dayak's tribe in West Kalimantan preserved the traditional agroforestry system "Tembawang". In the last two decades, rubber has been planted traditionally by... see more


William Ballesteros Possú, James R. Brandle, Héctor Ramiro Ordóñez    

In the United States of America, agriculture is performed on large farms of monocultures, affecting ecosystems and making a great contribution to climate change. The carbon storage potential for twelve field windbreak designs containing one-, two- and th... see more


Fernando Ayala Niño,Yolanda Maya Delgado,Enrique Troyo Diéguez    

Soil is generally conceived as infrastructure support and medium for agricultural production, while the environmental services soil provides are poorly valued or recognized. Among these services, carbon (C) sequester and storage is a focal point of scien... see more