4.2 Article

Variation in trunk taper of buttressed trees within and among five lowland tropical forests

Journal

BIOTROPICA
Volume 53, Issue 5, Pages 1442-1453

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/btp.12994

Keywords

aboveground biomass; buttressed trees; forest dynamics; forest plots; measurement error; photogrammetry; tropical forest; trunk taper

Categories

Funding

  1. CTFS-ForestGEO Grants Program

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Accurately projecting global carbon dynamics requires understanding controls over temporal and spatial tropical forest biomass variation, with errors in estimates often due to nonstandard and changing measurement heights. This study measured trunk taper for buttressed trees in lowland tropical forests and proposed a general taper model to reduce bias in biomass estimates. Factors such as diameter, buttress height, and wood density were found to influence trunk taper variation, with the model producing site-level biomass estimates within 3.4% of measured taper estimates.
Accurately projecting global carbon dynamics requires understanding controls over temporal and spatial tropical forest biomass variation. Changes in tropical forest aboveground biomass per area are most commonly estimated using repeat forest plot censuses, but errors in these estimates can be relatively large, limiting our ability to detect real changes in forest carbon. One source of error is nonstandard heights of diameter measurement, which are common in tropical forests because buttressed trees are usually measured above buttresses. Nonstandard and temporally variable measurement heights affect biomass change estimates because tree trunks taper-higher measurements result in smaller diameters and, thus, smaller estimated biomass. Modeling trunk taper is a potential way to correct for biases associated with nonstandard and changing measurement heights. We measured trunk taper for 260 buttressed trees in five lowland tropical forests to assess variation in taper within and among sites. Trunks taper more slowly in trees with larger diameters above buttress, taller buttresses, and higher wood density; these variables together explain 29% of taper variation. We also used plot data to quantify the distribution of measurement heights-and potential for bias in biomass estimates. We found significant variation in measurement heights among plots, and over time within plots. At the site level, our general taper model (taper predicted from diameter above buttress, buttress height, and wood density) produced site-level biomass estimates within 3.4%, on average, of estimates from measured taper. We recommend using this model to reduce bias from nonstandard measurement heights in studies of tropical forest biomass variation. Abstract in Spanish is available with online material.

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