We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
The Grove of Giants: Tasmania's most carbon‐dense forest.
- Authors
Sanger, Jennifer C.; Ferrari, Atalaya
- Abstract
The Grove of Giants in the Huon Valley of Tasmania, Australia is renowned for its large trees. A team of tree climbers and citizen scientists undertook a carbon assessment of a 2 hectare plot within the Grove of Giants. The largest 16 trees in the plot (>2.5 m DBH) were measured by tree climbers allowing for accurate estimation of tree volume. Understory trees, coarse woody debris, root biomass and soil carbon were also estimated, making this study the most comprehensive assessment of forest carbon in Tasmania. Total forest carbon was estimated to be 1312 tonnes per hectare. Large trees had the highest carbon stocks, accounting for 44% of the total store. Coarse woody debris represented 19% of the forest's carbon, root biomass was 14%, while the understory trees accounted for 12% and soil carbon for 11%. This is the highest carbon stock recorded in Tasmania and is above the average estimates for temperate forest ecosystems in other parts of the world. Protecting Tasmania's forests, especially mature wet Eucalypt forests, is important to avoid potential greenhouse gas emissions and ensure safe storage of the carbon in the land sector.
- Subjects
TASMANIA; GREENHOUSE gases; COARSE woody debris; TEMPERATE forest ecology; CARBON in soils; BIOMASS conversion
- Publication
Austral Ecology, 2023, Vol 48, Issue 7, p1245
- ISSN
1442-9985
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/aec.13407