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Tree height integrated into pantropical forest biomass estimates

Authors :
Feldpausch, Ted R.
Lloyd, J.
Lewis, Simon L.
Brienen, R.J.W.
Gloor, M.
Monteagudo Mendoza, A.
Lopez Gonzalez, G.
Banin, L.
Abu Salim, K.
Affum-Baffoe, K.
Alexiades, M.
Almeida, S.
Amaral, Ieda
Andrade, Ana
Aragao, Luiz
Araujo Murakami, A.
Arets, E.J.M.M.
Arroyo, L.
Aymard, Gerardo
Baker, T.R. de
Banki, Olaf
Berry, N. J.
Cardozo, N.
Jerome, Chave
Comiskey, J. A.
Alvarez, E.
de Oliveira, A.
Di Fiore, A.
Djagbletey, G.
Domingues, T.F.
Erwin, T.
Fearnside, P. M.
França, M. B.
Freitas, M. A.
Higuchi, Niro
Honorio C., E.
Iida, Y.
Jimenez, E.
Kassim, A.R.
Killeen, T.J.
Laurance, W.F.
Lovett, Jon C.
Malhi, Y.
Marimon, B.S.
Marimon-Junior, B.H.
Lenza, E.
Marshall, A.R.
Mendoza, Casimiro
Metcalfe, D.J.
Mitchard, E.T.A.
Neill, D.A.
Nelson, B.W.
Nilus, R.
Nogueira, E.M.
Parada, A.
Peh, K.S.-H.
Peña Cruz, A.
Peñuela, M.C.
Pitman, N.C.A.
Prieto, A.
Quesada, C.A.
Ramírez, F.
Ramirez Angulo, H.
Reitsma, J.M.
Rudas, A.
Saiz, G.
Salomao, R. P.
Schwarz, M.
Silva, N.
Silva Espejo, J.E.
Silveira, Marcos
Sonke, Bonaventura
Stropp, Juliana
Taedoumg, H. E.
Tan, S.
Ter Steege, Hans
Terborgh, J.
Torello-Raventos, M.
Van der Heijden, Geertje
Vasquez, R.
Vilanova, Emilio
Vos, V. A.
White, L.
Willcock, S.
Woell, H.
Phillip, Oliver L.
Feldpausch, Ted R.
Lloyd, J.
Lewis, Simon L.
Brienen, R.J.W.
Gloor, M.
Monteagudo Mendoza, A.
Lopez Gonzalez, G.
Banin, L.
Abu Salim, K.
Affum-Baffoe, K.
Alexiades, M.
Almeida, S.
Amaral, Ieda
Andrade, Ana
Aragao, Luiz
Araujo Murakami, A.
Arets, E.J.M.M.
Arroyo, L.
Aymard, Gerardo
Baker, T.R. de
Banki, Olaf
Berry, N. J.
Cardozo, N.
Jerome, Chave
Comiskey, J. A.
Alvarez, E.
de Oliveira, A.
Di Fiore, A.
Djagbletey, G.
Domingues, T.F.
Erwin, T.
Fearnside, P. M.
França, M. B.
Freitas, M. A.
Higuchi, Niro
Honorio C., E.
Iida, Y.
Jimenez, E.
Kassim, A.R.
Killeen, T.J.
Laurance, W.F.
Lovett, Jon C.
Malhi, Y.
Marimon, B.S.
Marimon-Junior, B.H.
Lenza, E.
Marshall, A.R.
Mendoza, Casimiro
Metcalfe, D.J.
Mitchard, E.T.A.
Neill, D.A.
Nelson, B.W.
Nilus, R.
Nogueira, E.M.
Parada, A.
Peh, K.S.-H.
Peña Cruz, A.
Peñuela, M.C.
Pitman, N.C.A.
Prieto, A.
Quesada, C.A.
Ramírez, F.
Ramirez Angulo, H.
Reitsma, J.M.
Rudas, A.
Saiz, G.
Salomao, R. P.
Schwarz, M.
Silva, N.
Silva Espejo, J.E.
Silveira, Marcos
Sonke, Bonaventura
Stropp, Juliana
Taedoumg, H. E.
Tan, S.
Ter Steege, Hans
Terborgh, J.
Torello-Raventos, M.
Van der Heijden, Geertje
Vasquez, R.
Vilanova, Emilio
Vos, V. A.
White, L.
Willcock, S.
Woell, H.
Phillip, Oliver L.
Source :
Biogeosciences, ISSN 1726-4170, 2012-08, No. 9
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Aboveground tropical tree biomass and carbon storage estimates commonly ignore tree height (H). We estimate the effect of incorporating H on tropics-wide forest biomass estimates in 327 plots across four continents using 42 656 H and diameter measurements and harvested trees from 20 sites to answer the following questions: 1. What is the best H-model form and geographic unit to include in biomass models to minimise site-level uncertainty in estimates of destructive biomass? 2. To what extent does including H estimates derived in (1) reduce uncertainty in biomass estimates across all 327 plots? 3. What effect does accounting for H have on plot- and continental-scale forest biomass estimates? The mean relative error in biomass estimates of destructively harvested trees when including H (mean 0.06), was half that when excluding H (mean 0.13). Power- andWeibull-H models provided the greatest reduction in uncertainty, with regional Weibull-H models preferred because they reduce uncertainty in smaller-diameter classes (?40 cm D) that store about one-third of biomass per hectare in most forests. Propagating the relationships from destructively harvested tree biomass to each of the 327 plots from across the tropics shows that including H reduces errors from 41.8Mgha?1 (range 6.6 to 112.4) to 8.0Mgha?1 (?2.5 to 23.0). For all plots, aboveground live biomass was ?52.2 Mgha?1 (?82.0 to ?20.3 bootstrapped 95%CI), or 13%, lower when including H estimates, with the greatest relative reductions in estimated biomass in forests of the Brazilian Shield, east Africa, and Australia, and relatively little change in the Guiana Shield, central Africa and southeast Asia. Appreciably different stand structure was observed among regions across the tropical continents, with some storing significantly more biomass in small diameter stems, which affects selection of the best height models to reduce uncertainty and biomass reductions due to H. After accounting for variation in H, total biomass p

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Biogeosciences, ISSN 1726-4170, 2012-08, No. 9
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn879158303
Document Type :
Electronic Resource