4.7 Article

Forest carbon sink in the US (1870-2012) driven by substitution of forest ecosystem service flows

Journal

RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING
Volume 176, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.resconrec.2021.105927

Keywords

Forest transition; United States; Ecosystem services; Forest use; Carbon dynamics; Social metabolism

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (ERC StG 'HEFT') [757995]
  2. University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna (BOKU)
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [757995] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study found that the proportion of industrial wood in total forest biomass harvest in the United States continued to increase, while the demand for fuelwood and grazing gradually decreased, mainly due to shifts in feed and energy sources, as well as the substitution of fossil fuels for fuelwood. These changes have helped alleviate pressure on forest ecosystems to some extent.
Understanding the dynamics behind forest transitions, i.e., shifts from deforestation to forest recovery, is crucial for forest conservation and climate-change mitigation i.e., carbon (C) sequestration. We investigated the drivers of the forest transition in the United States, which was characterized by forest thickening despite surges in industrial wood extraction. We employ the concepts of Human Appropriation of Net Primary Productivity (HANPP) and Material and Energy Flow Analysis (MEFA) to quantitatively assess changes in major provisioning ecosystem services demanded from forests, i.e., industrial wood (comprising biomass used in products such as paper and pulp), grazing, and fuelwood, and analyse substitution processes from 1870-2012 at regional, sectoral, and national scales. The share of industrial wood in total annual forest biomass harvest increased from 23% to 84% over the time-period, while fuelwood and biomass grazed declined from 63% to 13%, and 14% to 3%, respectively. Reductions in demand for fuelwood and biomass grazed were enabled by shifts in feed and energy sources, consequently allowing for increases in both livestock numbers and energy use. Feed crops increased six-fold, alleviating grazing pressure on forest ecosystems, particularly in the Eastern states. Fossil fuels replaced fuelwood, especially in the residential sector. Between 1900-2012 the final energy mix increased seventeen-fold. Thus, the increase in biomass C stocks in U.S. forests was connected to substitution of forest ecosystem services with fossil fuel-based production systems, and with manifold increases in societal resource use and C dynamics. Such shifts need to be considered when assessing the positive environmental effects of forest transitions.

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