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Effects of agriculture and timber harvest on carbon sequestration in the eastern US forests
Author(s) -
Dangal Shree R.S.,
Felzer Benjamin S.,
Hurteau Matthew D.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: biogeosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8961
pISSN - 2169-8953
DOI - 10.1002/2013jg002409
Subject(s) - environmental science , disturbance (geology) , carbon sequestration , carbon sink , sink (geography) , temperate climate , climate change , agriculture , atmospheric sciences , temperate rainforest , ecology , carbon dioxide , geography , geology , paleontology , cartography , ecosystem , biology
Abstract Forest carbon (C) sequestration in the eastern US will largely be driven by the interactive effects of disturbance due to land use change or management, climate, elevated CO 2 , and air pollution during the 21 st century. In this study, we parameterized a process‐based model (TEM‐Hydro2) to quantify the effects of agriculture and timber harvest, climate, elevated CO 2 , and ozone on C sequestration during the 20 th and the 21 st century. We have not included the effects of natural disturbance such as fire, insect outbreaks, hurricanes, and tropical storms during the course of this study. Our site‐specific comparisons suggest that C recovery of forests after anthropogenic disturbance depends on the time since disturbance and amount of C in different pools, including wood product pools with residence times ranging from 1 to 100 years. Our 20 th century regional simulations show that recovery following anthropogenic disturbance and elevated CO 2 increased net carbon exchange (NCE), or net gain in the sink strength, by 64 and 32%, respectively, while ozone decreased NCE by 18%. However, there was a net loss of C due to disturbance if accounting from 1700. The 21 st century simulation using the SRES A2 emissions resulted in an increase in NCE by 79% following partial annual timber harvest and 31% due to CO 2 fertilization, whereas climate and ozone decreased NCE by 12 and 8%, respectively. Our modeling results indicate that anthropogenic disturbance is an important factor to include for improving model accuracy in simulating C stocks and fluxes of eastern temperate forests.

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