4.7 Article

Woody debris in a 16-year old Pinus radiata plantation in Australia:: Mass, carbon and nitrogen stocks, and turnover

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 228, Issue 1-3, Pages 145-151

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2006.02.043

Keywords

carbon; forest floor; nitrogen; Pinus radiata; release; woody debris

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Woody debris that is accumulated on the forest floor could potentially be a relatively long-term carbon (C) sink in forest ecosystems. For a 16-year old Pinus radiata D. Don. plantation in Australia, we quantified the dry mass, C and nitrogen (N) stored in woody debris (including dead logs, branches and twigs) relative to the loss of soil C that followed afforestation of the native pasture onto which the plantation had been established. This debris derived mainly from forest management (thinning and pruning) 8 years earlier. The line intersect technique was used on ten 10 m x 12 m plots to estimate the mass of woody debris on the forest floor in 10 diameter classes. There was 6.1 Mg ha(-1) of oven dry woody debris, containing 3.1 Mg C ha(-1) and 12.9 kg N ha(-1), on the forest floor. The largest diameter class (> 50 mm) contributed most of the debris' mass. We also estimated rates of decomposition, and C and N release from the woody debris and calculated its half-life and life time (95% disappearance). The overall decay rate constant (k) for all woody debris was 0.069 year(-1). The overall half-life and lifetime was 10 and 43 years, respectively. Almost half (42%) of the original C in woody debris was released in the 8 years of decay, but only 12% of the original N was released. Decay rate varied with size class with the largest diameter (> 50 mm) decaying the fastest, the smallest diameter class (< 5 mm) decaying the second fastest, and the intermediate size-classes being the slowest to decay. Although N was slowly released from the woody debris, this pool was an effective C sink per unit-N involved because of its high C:N ratio. The C stored in the pool offset 22% of the observed soil C-stock reduction 16 years after land use change from pasture to pine plantation. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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