Tree biomass and soil carbon stocks in indigenous forests in comparison to plantations of exotic species in the Taita Hills of Kenya

Visa fullständig post



Permalänk

http://hdl.handle.net/10138/44810

Citation

Omoro , L M A , Starr , M & Pellikka , P K E 2013 , ' Tree biomass and soil carbon stocks in indigenous forests in comparison to plantations of exotic species in the Taita Hills of Kenya ' , Silva Fennica , vol. 47 , no. 2 , 935 . https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.935

Titel: Tree biomass and soil carbon stocks in indigenous forests in comparison to plantations of exotic species in the Taita Hills of Kenya
Författare: Omoro, Loice M.A.; Starr, Mike; Pellikka, Petri K.E.
Upphovmannens organisation: Department of Forest Sciences
Michael Starr / Principal Investigator
Department of Geosciences and Geography
Forest Soil Science and Biogeochemistry
Forest Ecology and Management
Datum: 2013
Språk: eng
Sidantal: 18
Tillhör serie: Silva Fennica
ISSN: 0037-5330
DOI: https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.935
Permanenta länken (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10138/44810
Abstrakt: Carbon (C) densities of the tree biomass and soil (0-50 cm) in indigenous forest and plantations of eucalyptus, cypress and pine in the Taita Hills, Kenya were determined and compared. The cypress and pine plantations were about 30-years-old and eucalyptus plantations about 50-years-old. Biomass C densities were estimated from breast height diameter and wood density using allometric functions developed for tropical species and an assumed C content of 50 %. Belowground biomass C densities were estimated using root:shoot biomass ratios. Soil organic C (SOC) densities were calculated from measured organic carbon contents (0-20 and 20-50 cm layers) and modelled bulk density values. Mean total biomass C and SOC densities for indigenous forest were greater than those of the plantations, and the difference was significant (p<0.05) in the cases of cypress and pine biomass and pine SOC. The correlation between biomass C and SOC densities was nearly significant in the case of indigenous forest, but negative. Biomass C densities were not significantly correlated with mean annual precipitation, mean annual temperature or potential evapotranspiration, but pine biomass C densities were significantly correlated to actual evapotranspiration. SOC densities were more strongly correlated to mean annual precipitation than biomass C densities, but only significantly so in the case of pine. Neither biomass C nor SOC densities were correlated to plant available water capacity of the soil. Indigenous forest SOC densities were significantly correlated to soil clay contents, but negatively. Indigenous forests sequester more C in biomass and soil than do 30 to 50-year-old plantations of exotics, but it remains unclear if this is an intrinsic difference between indigenous forest and plantations of exotics or because of insufficient time for SOC levels in plantations to recover after clearance of original indigenous forest.
Subject: 4112 Forestry
Referentgranskad: Ja
Användningsbegränsning: openAccess
Parallelpublicerad version: publishedVersion


Filer under denna titel

Totalt antal nerladdningar: Laddar...

Filer Storlek Format Granska
Omoro_SF_2013.pdf 977.1Kb PDF Granska/Öppna

Detta dokument registreras i samling:

Visa fullständig post