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Assessment of biomass and carbon storage of a Populus simonii windbreak located in the Western Cape Province, South Africa.

Authors :
Sheppard, Jonathan P.
Larysch, Elena
Cuaranhua, Claudio J.
Schindler, Zoe
Toit, Ben du
Malherbe, Gideon F.
Kunneke, Anton
Morhart, Christopher
Reckziegel, Rafael Bohn
Seifert, Thomas
Kahle, Hans‑Peter
Source :
Agroforestry Systems; Mar2024, Vol. 98 Issue 3, p697-714, 18p, 2 Color Photographs, 2 Charts, 8 Graphs
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The integration of trees within agricultural systems delivers the opportunity to provide multiple benefts over those aforded by agriculture without trees. The use of windbreaks as a form of agroforestry, in water scarce environments, is primarily used to reduce windspeeds in order to decrease evapotranspiration. Quick growing poplar species such as Populus simonii ((Carrière) Wesm.) are frequently utilised within windbreak structures, but to date, few allometric equations are available to quantify biomass production and to make inferences about carbon storage potential of this species, and none outside the forest. To fll this knowledge gap, we destructively sampled 17 P. simonii growing within a windbreak on a wine estate in the Western Cape Provence, South Africa. Power functions were constructed to explain tree height, whole tree aboveground woody biomass, stem and branch biomass as a function of stem diameter at 1.3 m. Additional functions were developed to predict individual branch length and biomass based on branch stub diameter. The presented models explained each variable with high signifcance. The models could be used to estimate carbon stock per km of windbreak for the given example. Furthermore, bark percentage predicted by stem sectional diameter was modelled to provide a function that can separate wood and bark fractions as a further outlook for the species’ utilisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01674366
Volume :
98
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Agroforestry Systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180939459
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10457-023-00940-1