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Forest vegetation is a key factor in the maintenance of global carbon cycle balance under the present climate change conditions. Forest ecosystems are both buffers against extreme climatic events accompanying climate change and carbon sinks diminishing the environmental impact of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. We investigated the influence of stand structure and site characteristics on the productivity and carbon storage capacity of temperate forest types. Predictors of species productivity were parameters such as stand density, age, height, average diameter and wood density. Morus alba (L.) was more productive than average both in terms of annual volume increment and annual biomass gain, while Quercus sessiliflora (Matt.) Lieb. and Quercus frainetto (Ten.) were significantly less productive than average. Differences in stand productivity were explained by stand density, age, height, altitude, type of regeneration and species composition. Statistically significant differences were measured between the productivity of stands dominated by different woody species, with low productive stands dominated by slow growing species with high wood density like Quercus or Fagus, and highly productive stands rich in fast growing species with low wood density like Populus or Salix. Stands with different plant communities in the underlying herbaceous layer also tended to have different levels of productivity.
The rapid global urban growth poses a great risk to the ecosystem services which are vital to sustaining and fulfilling human life. As an essential part of Fuzhou eco-planning task in south-eastern China, we identified the priority conservation areas for ecosystem services to allow a sustainable urban expansion. We modeled and mapped five ecosystem services (carbon storage, timber production, water yield, water-quality improvement and sediment retention) using InVEST and proposed a definition of priority areas for the conservation of ecosystem services. Priority areas for individual ecosystem services showed that 24% of the region was needed to produce 26% of water yield. Between 6 and 17% of the region was required to conserve at least 20% of other four services, depending on the ecosystem service of interest. In addition, scenarios for multiple ecosystem services conservation were developed using the ordered weighted averaging (OWA) method, a multicriteria evaluation method, to take the tradeoffs among ecosystem services into account. The results showed that, along with the decrease of the OWA risk, the overall areas and the areas at both of the conservative levels dropped gradually. Furthermore, two efficiency indices were created to evaluate the performance of different OWA scenarios. Study results suggested that the efficiency of scenarios was associated with the conservation threshold and OWA risk, as well as the spatial correlation among ecosystem services. In sum, identifying priority areas for ecosystem services in a spatially explicit manner, and analyzing tradeoffs between them, can help make land use and natural resource decisions more effective and efficient.
The quantification of biomass carbon pools is important for understanding carbon cycling in forest ecosystems. This study was designed to reveal the effects of stand age on biomass partitioning and carbon storage of Chinese fir plantation stands in Dabie Mountains of Anhui, East China. A total of six even-aged Chinese fir plantation stands along an age-sequence from 10 to 50 years were selected. To quantify the biomass of different tree components, 18 trees with diameter at breast height (D1.3) from 6.5 to 35.2 cm were harvested from the different aged stands. Biomasses of understory vegetation, forest floor and standing dead trees were also investigated. Total biomass carbon storages ranged from 57.6 to 211.4 Mg ha–1 in the different aged stands. Tree layer comprised from 93.7% to 96.4% of the total biomass C pools in the different aged stands. The C pools of the necromass were from 1.8 to 6.2 Mg ha–1. Stand age had a significant effect on tree biomass partitioning, with an increase in proportion of root biomass. The root/shoot ratios were from 0.187 to 0.312, which was significantly positively correlated to stand age. The existing plantation stands are still developing and have somewhat high rate of biomass and carbon accumulations beyond the normal rotation period (usually 25–30 years) even over an age of 50 years. Appropriate prolongation of the rotation period of Chinese fir plantation will be effective in maintaining long-term productivity and providing large carbon sink. The measurements provide valuable data for modelling productivity of Chinese fir plantation forest.
Cycads are an ancient lineage of plants that originated in the Permian, which are vital to the interpretation of plant ecology. The evidence in the fossil records indicates that the morphological and anatomical features of cycads are remarkably similar to the extant taxa, which has been instrumental in our understanding the connections between the early origins of seed plants and their present-day counterparts. The cycad ecosystem is an important vegetation type throughout geological time. Research on the ecological function of the cycad plays a significant role in the study of evolutionary ecology. In this study, we investigated the biomass, productivity and total carbon storage (total of vegetation, litter, and soil carbon) of cycad (Cycas panzhihuaensis L. Zhou et S.Y. Yang) ecosystems in the National C. panzhihuaensis Reserve of China (latitude 26°37′, longitude 101°35′, at 1635 m altitude) by applying the site-standard tree sampling harvest.Cycads are considered to be rare and endangered species, and are in the list of key protected wild plants in the world. The National C. panzhihuaensis Reserve is in Southwestern China, which area approximately 1358 ha, growing approximately 20 000 C. panzhihuaensis individuals. 20 sample plots, each 5 × 5 m were established in the spring of 2006. The mean height of cycads within the stand was 0.44 m and the mean basal diameter was 23.2 cm. The biomass and productivity data for other communities was compiled from references published over the past 20 years throughout China. The biomass and productivity of cycad ecosystems (8.102 ± 6.880 t C ha⁻¹ and 1.183 ± 0.975 t C ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹, respectively) are smaller than tree fern (Alsophila spinulosa (Wall. ex Hook.) R. M. Tryon) or gymnosperm (Pinaceae, Cupressaceae or Taxodiaceae for representative) ecosystems. The community biomass of Pinaceae-, Cupressaceae- or Taxodiaceae-dominated ecosystems are 6.8, 5.4, and 5.3 times larger than the cycad ecosystem, respectively. The productivity of each is 2.3, 2.8 and 3.8 times larger than the cycad ecosystem. Cycad is an ancient dioecious plant. However, the results show that the differences between the biomass of male and female cycads, as well as the productivity, are not significant.
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