Back to Search Start Over

Growth and carbon stock change in eucalypt woodlands in northeast Australia: ecological and greenhouse sink implications

Authors :
T. Danaher
J. O. Carter
W. H. Burrows
Beverley Henry
E. R. Anderson
M. B. Hoffmann
G. M . McKeon
L. J. Tait
P. V. Back
N. Menke
Source :
Global Change Biology. 8:769-784
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Wiley, 2002.

Abstract

Data from 57 permanent monitoring sites are used to document the growth in woody vegetation and estimate the carbon sink in 27Mha of eucalypt woodlands (savannas), contained withii c. 6OMha of grazed woodlands in Queensland (northeast Australia). The study sites are shown to be representative of the environment and structure of the eucalypt woodlands in the defined study area. Mean basal area increment for all live woody plants in 30 long-tenn sites, with an average initial basal area of 11.86 + 1.38 (SE)m2ha-', was 1.06m2ha-' over a mean 14years timeframe. The majority of the measurement period, commencing between 1982 and 1988, was characterized by belowaverage rainfall. The increase in live tree basal area was due primarily to growth of existing trees (3.1Zm2ha-'1 rather than establishment of new plants (0.25m2ha-I) qd was partly offset by death (2.31m2ha-'1. A simple but robust relationship between stand basal area and stand biomass of all woody species was developed for the eucalypt dominant woodlands. Analysis of above-ground carbon stocks in live and standing dead woody plants gave a mean net above-ground annual carbon increment for all 57 sites of 0.53 t C ha-' y-l, similar to values estimated elsewhere in world savannas. Published root: shoot ratios were used to infer C flux in woody mot systems on these sites. This results in an estimated sink in above- and below-ground biomass of 18MtCy-' over the eucalypt woodlands studied, and potentially up to 35MtCy-I if extended to all grazed woodlands in Queensland. It is suggested that introduction of livestock grazing and altered fire regimes have triggered the change in tree-grass dominance in these woodlands. Thus, change in carbon stocks in the grazed woodlands of Queensland is identified as an important component of human-induced greenhouse gas flux in Australia, equivalent in magnitude to c. 25% of the most recently published (1999) total estimated national net emissions. The latter inventory takes into account emissions from land clearing, but does not include the sink identified in the pment study. This sequestration also represents a small but significant contribution to the global terrestrial carbon sink.

Details

ISSN :
13541013
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Global Change Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ef09ff0db91df491c33214982300da7e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2486.2002.00515.x