GYIG OpenIR  > 环境地球化学国家重点实验室
Aboveground carbon stock, allocation and sequestration potential during vegetation recovery in the karst region of southwestern China: A case study at a watershed scale
Changcheng Liu;  Yuguo Liu;  Ke Guo;  Shijie Wang;  Huiming Liu;  Haiwei Zhao;  Xianguo Qiao;  Dongjie Hou;  Shaobin Li
2016
Source PublicationAgriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
Volume235Pages:91-100
Abstract

Karst landscape in southwestern China is one of the most typical landscapes developed on carbonate bedrock and has the largest area in the world. Carbon sequestration potentials during secondary karst vegetation recovery remain uncertain. Based on the vegetation map and 87 sampling plots at five stages of natural vegetation succession, this study estimated aboveground (AG) vegetation carbon stocks and dynamics at a watershed scale. AG carbon density of grasslands, shrublands, shrub forests, secondary forests and primary forests was 1.70, 4.15, 22.3, 70.3, 142.2 Mg ha−1, respectively. The ten most important species stored 71.6–96.1% of total AG carbon stock, indicating that carbon pool in karst vegetation was determined by a few dominant species. Main contributors to AG carbon stock shifted from individuals in small diameter classes in shrublands to individuals in large diameter classes in primary forests, indicating that carbon increases in the early vegetation succession resulted from high recruitment of woody plants, while carbon accumulations in the later forests were mainly due to tree growth. The long time required for secondary forests to recover carbon density to the level of primary forests could be explained by the slow speed of large evergreen trees reaching a high level of dominance during secondary succession on the harsh habitats. The total AG carbon stock of the studied watershed (7.50 × 103 ha) was 85.9 × 103 Mg, of which paddy fields, dry lands, grasslands, shrublands, shrub forests and secondary forests accounted for 22.6%, 3.49%, 0.34%, 5.97%, 12.3% and 55.3%, respectively. The AG carbon stock in this watershed would increase by 92.5% in 50–100 years and by 4.40 times in 140–200 years if the degraded vegetation types could continue to develop into mature forests. Although carbon density of karst forests was significantly lower than that of the forests on non-karst habitats in the same latitudinal zone, the degraded karst vegetation showed a great carbon sequestration potential due to the large distribution area in southwestern China.

KeywordAboveground Carbon density Carbon Sequestration Potential karst Ecosystem secondary Vegetation Succession species Composition
Indexed BySCI
Language英语
Document Type期刊论文
Identifierhttp://ir.gyig.ac.cn/handle/42920512-1/9620
Collection环境地球化学国家重点实验室
Affiliation1.State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China
2.Institute of Desertification Studies, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, China
3.State Key Laboratory of Environmental Geochemistry, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guiyang 550002, China
4.Puding Karst Ecosystem Research Station, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Puding 562101, China
5.Satellite Environment Center, Ministry of Environmental Protection of China, Beijing 100094, China
6.University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
7.Forestry Bureau of Xingren County, Qianxinan, Guizhou Province, Xingren 562300, China
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Changcheng Liu;Yuguo Liu;Ke Guo;Shijie Wang;Huiming Liu;Haiwei Zhao;Xianguo Qiao;Dongjie Hou;Shaobin Li. Aboveground carbon stock, allocation and sequestration potential during vegetation recovery in the karst region of southwestern China: A case study at a watershed scale[J]. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment,2016,235:91-100.
APA Changcheng Liu;Yuguo Liu;Ke Guo;Shijie Wang;Huiming Liu;Haiwei Zhao;Xianguo Qiao;Dongjie Hou;Shaobin Li.(2016).Aboveground carbon stock, allocation and sequestration potential during vegetation recovery in the karst region of southwestern China: A case study at a watershed scale.Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment,235,91-100.
MLA Changcheng Liu;Yuguo Liu;Ke Guo;Shijie Wang;Huiming Liu;Haiwei Zhao;Xianguo Qiao;Dongjie Hou;Shaobin Li."Aboveground carbon stock, allocation and sequestration potential during vegetation recovery in the karst region of southwestern China: A case study at a watershed scale".Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 235(2016):91-100.
Files in This Item:
File Name/Size DocType Version Access License
Aboveground carbon s(1394KB)期刊论文作者接受稿开放获取CC BY-NC-SAView Application Full Text
Related Services
Recommend this item
Bookmark
Usage statistics
Export to Endnote
Google Scholar
Similar articles in Google Scholar
[Changcheng Liu;Yuguo Liu;Ke Guo;Shijie Wang;Huiming Liu;Haiwei Zhao;Xianguo Qiao;Dongjie Hou;Shaobin Li]'s Articles
Baidu academic
Similar articles in Baidu academic
[Changcheng Liu;Yuguo Liu;Ke Guo;Shijie Wang;Huiming Liu;Haiwei Zhao;Xianguo Qiao;Dongjie Hou;Shaobin Li]'s Articles
Bing Scholar
Similar articles in Bing Scholar
[Changcheng Liu;Yuguo Liu;Ke Guo;Shijie Wang;Huiming Liu;Haiwei Zhao;Xianguo Qiao;Dongjie Hou;Shaobin Li]'s Articles
Terms of Use
No data!
Social Bookmark/Share
File name: Aboveground carbon stock, allocation and sequestration potential during vegetation recovery in the karst region of southwestern China.pdf
Format: Adobe PDF
All comments (0)
No comment.
 

Items in the repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.