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Role of Satoyama Forest towards Sustainability: Contributing to Carbon Stock in Japan
Author(s) -
M. Rakib Uddin,
Juri Fujieda
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of tropical resources and sustainable science/journal of tropical resources and sustainable science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2462-2389
pISSN - 2289-3946
DOI - 10.47253/jtrss.v3i2.528
Subject(s) - environmental science , agroforestry , soil carbon , carbon stock , forestry , biomass (ecology) , forest management , sustainability , geography , agronomy , soil water , soil science , ecology , biology , climate change
This study investigated the potentials of Satoyama forests to contribute in increasingcarbon stock by inclusion of controlled biomass harvesting in the forms of thinning and pruning under a planned forest management intervention. A Satoyama forest named Oaota in Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan was selected for the study. We calculated present carbon stock of the forest by using sample data from four quadratic plots (two in each site) from which we measured the diameter and height of trees including the diameter and length of branches. Five conical shaped leaf traps were used to measure the amount of leaf biomass production in a year. Soil organic carbon was analyzed by NC analyzer for 0-30 cm depth of soil. The study revealed that the Oaota forest contributed to carbon capture in the forms of 158.7 tC/ha (80.95 tC/ha for soil, 76.19 tC/ha for wood and 1.63 tC/ha/y for leaves). Soil carbon accumulation was not considered in this study. The results indicated that by harvesting planned amount of biomass to consume as a zero-emission renewable fuel alternative to replace high carbon emission fuels may help reduction in carbon releases and enhances the carbon capture performace as well as revitalization of Satoyama forests.

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