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The persistence of carbon in the African forest understory.

Authors :
Hubau, Wannes
De Mil, Tom
Van den Bulcke, Jan
Phillips, Oliver L
Angoboy Ilondea, Bhély
Van Acker, Joris
Sullivan, Martin JP
Nsenga, Laurent
Toirambe, Benjamin
Couralet, Camille
Banin, Lindsay F
Begne, Serge K
Baker, Timothy R
Bourland, Nils
Chezeaux, Eric
Clark, Connie J
Collins, Murray
Comiskey, James A
Cuni-Sanchez, Aida
Deklerck, Victor
Dierickx, Sofie
Doucet, Jean-Louis
Ewango, Corneille EN
Feldpausch, Ted R
Gilpin, Martin
Gonmadje, Christelle
Hall, Jefferson S
Harris, David J
Hardy, Olivier J
Kamdem, Marie-Noel D
Kasongo Yakusu, Emmanuel
Lopez-Gonzalez, Gabriela
Makana, Jean-Remy
Malhi, Yadvinder
Mbayu, Faustin M
Moore, Sam
Mukinzi, Jacques
Pickavance, Georgia
Poulsen, John R
Reitsma, Jan
Rousseau, Mélissa
Sonké, Bonaventure
Sunderland, Terry
Taedoumg, Hermann
Talbot, Joey
Tshibamba Mukendi, John
Umunay, Peter M
Vleminckx, Jason
White, Lee JT
Zemagho, Lise
Lewis, Simon L
Beeckman, Hans
Hubau, Wannes
De Mil, Tom
Van den Bulcke, Jan
Phillips, Oliver L
Angoboy Ilondea, Bhély
Van Acker, Joris
Sullivan, Martin JP
Nsenga, Laurent
Toirambe, Benjamin
Couralet, Camille
Banin, Lindsay F
Begne, Serge K
Baker, Timothy R
Bourland, Nils
Chezeaux, Eric
Clark, Connie J
Collins, Murray
Comiskey, James A
Cuni-Sanchez, Aida
Deklerck, Victor
Dierickx, Sofie
Doucet, Jean-Louis
Ewango, Corneille EN
Feldpausch, Ted R
Gilpin, Martin
Gonmadje, Christelle
Hall, Jefferson S
Harris, David J
Hardy, Olivier J
Kamdem, Marie-Noel D
Kasongo Yakusu, Emmanuel
Lopez-Gonzalez, Gabriela
Makana, Jean-Remy
Malhi, Yadvinder
Mbayu, Faustin M
Moore, Sam
Mukinzi, Jacques
Pickavance, Georgia
Poulsen, John R
Reitsma, Jan
Rousseau, Mélissa
Sonké, Bonaventure
Sunderland, Terry
Taedoumg, Hermann
Talbot, Joey
Tshibamba Mukendi, John
Umunay, Peter M
Vleminckx, Jason
White, Lee JT
Zemagho, Lise
Lewis, Simon L
Beeckman, Hans
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Quantifying carbon dynamics in forests is critical for understanding their role in long-term climate regulation1-4. Yet little is known about tree longevity in tropical forests3,5-8, a factor that is vital for estimating carbon persistence3,4. Here we calculate mean carbon age (the period that carbon is fixed in trees7) in different strata of African tropical forests using (1) growth-ring records with a unique timestamp accurately demarcating 66 years of growth in one site and (2) measurements of diameter increments from the African Tropical Rainforest Observation Network (23 sites). We find that in spite of their much smaller size, in understory trees mean carbon age (74 years) is greater than in sub-canopy (54 years) and canopy (57 years) trees and similar to carbon age in emergent trees (66 years). The remarkable carbon longevity in the understory results from slow and aperiodic growth as an adaptation to limited resource availability9-11. Our analysis also reveals that while the understory represents a small share (11%) of the carbon stock12,13, it contributes disproportionally to the forest carbon sink (20%). We conclude that accounting for the diversity of carbon age and carbon sequestration among different forest strata is critical for effective conservation management14-16 and for accurate modelling of carbon cycling4.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1267395842
Document Type :
Electronic Resource