Effects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in Yucatan Peninsula

Management of secondary forest can contribute to climate change mitigation through carbon storage. In the Yucatan Peninsula, forest owners practise thinning and tree enrichment with commercial species in secondary forest, with the aim of halting deforestation and raising household income. This field study assessed the effects of thinning (60% removal) and tree species enrichment in 15 to 17-year-old secondary forests in Calakmul, Yucatan Peninsula, on carbon stocks (live biomass, dead biomass and soil organic carbon (SOC)), tree species diversity and abundance and the ability of tree species to store carbon. The treatments were two thinnings (T 2), three thinnings (T 3), two thinnings plus enrichment with pepper (Pimenta dioica) (T2P), no thinning and enrichment with cedar (Cedrela odorata) and mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) (T0CM) and, natural secondary forest (NSF). There were no significant differences in total carbon stocks (live biomass C + dead biomass C + SOC) between treatments, but T 2P had significantly less live biomass C than T 2, T 3 and NSF. There were also no significant differences in tree species diversity and richness between treatments, but T 0CM differed from T 2, T 3 and NSF in terms of species abundance. In the present study some tree species with high potential to store carbon were identified. Although no increment in carbon stocks were identified at the time of the carbon stock assessment (10–12 years after thinning) with 60% removal of vegetation compared to NSF, the nursed and introduced tree species give extra benefits to landowners, with no detrimental effects on forest diversity.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mendoza Vega, Jorge Doctor autor 2016, Venegas Sandoval, Andrea Doctora autora 21712, Kú Quej, V. M. Maestro autor 8365, Soto Pinto, Lorena 1958- Doctora autora 5454, De Jong, Bernardus Hendricus Jozeph Doctor autor 2038, Ramos Hernández, Silvia Guadalupe Doctora autora 14893
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Captura de carbono, Raleo forestal, Biomasa forestal, Bosque secundario, Biodiversidad forestal, Artfrosur,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s11056-023-09975-9
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:63765
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:637652024-03-12T13:01:05ZEffects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in Yucatan Peninsula Mendoza Vega, Jorge Doctor autor 2016 Venegas Sandoval, Andrea Doctora autora 21712 Kú Quej, V. M. Maestro autor 8365 Soto Pinto, Lorena 1958- Doctora autora 5454 De Jong, Bernardus Hendricus Jozeph Doctor autor 2038 Ramos Hernández, Silvia Guadalupe Doctora autora 14893 textengManagement of secondary forest can contribute to climate change mitigation through carbon storage. In the Yucatan Peninsula, forest owners practise thinning and tree enrichment with commercial species in secondary forest, with the aim of halting deforestation and raising household income. This field study assessed the effects of thinning (60% removal) and tree species enrichment in 15 to 17-year-old secondary forests in Calakmul, Yucatan Peninsula, on carbon stocks (live biomass, dead biomass and soil organic carbon (SOC)), tree species diversity and abundance and the ability of tree species to store carbon. The treatments were two thinnings (T 2), three thinnings (T 3), two thinnings plus enrichment with pepper (Pimenta dioica) (T2P), no thinning and enrichment with cedar (Cedrela odorata) and mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) (T0CM) and, natural secondary forest (NSF). There were no significant differences in total carbon stocks (live biomass C + dead biomass C + SOC) between treatments, but T 2P had significantly less live biomass C than T 2, T 3 and NSF. There were also no significant differences in tree species diversity and richness between treatments, but T 0CM differed from T 2, T 3 and NSF in terms of species abundance. In the present study some tree species with high potential to store carbon were identified. Although no increment in carbon stocks were identified at the time of the carbon stock assessment (10–12 years after thinning) with 60% removal of vegetation compared to NSF, the nursed and introduced tree species give extra benefits to landowners, with no detrimental effects on forest diversity.Management of secondary forest can contribute to climate change mitigation through carbon storage. In the Yucatan Peninsula, forest owners practise thinning and tree enrichment with commercial species in secondary forest, with the aim of halting deforestation and raising household income. This field study assessed the effects of thinning (60% removal) and tree species enrichment in 15 to 17-year-old secondary forests in Calakmul, Yucatan Peninsula, on carbon stocks (live biomass, dead biomass and soil organic carbon (SOC)), tree species diversity and abundance and the ability of tree species to store carbon. The treatments were two thinnings (T 2), three thinnings (T 3), two thinnings plus enrichment with pepper (Pimenta dioica) (T2P), no thinning and enrichment with cedar (Cedrela odorata) and mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) (T0CM) and, natural secondary forest (NSF). There were no significant differences in total carbon stocks (live biomass C + dead biomass C + SOC) between treatments, but T 2P had significantly less live biomass C than T 2, T 3 and NSF. There were also no significant differences in tree species diversity and richness between treatments, but T 0CM differed from T 2, T 3 and NSF in terms of species abundance. In the present study some tree species with high potential to store carbon were identified. Although no increment in carbon stocks were identified at the time of the carbon stock assessment (10–12 years after thinning) with 60% removal of vegetation compared to NSF, the nursed and introduced tree species give extra benefits to landowners, with no detrimental effects on forest diversity.Captura de carbonoRaleo forestalBiomasa forestalBosque secundarioBiodiversidad forestalArtfrosurNew Forestshttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11056-023-09975-9Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Captura de carbono
Raleo forestal
Biomasa forestal
Bosque secundario
Biodiversidad forestal
Artfrosur
Captura de carbono
Raleo forestal
Biomasa forestal
Bosque secundario
Biodiversidad forestal
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Captura de carbono
Raleo forestal
Biomasa forestal
Bosque secundario
Biodiversidad forestal
Artfrosur
Captura de carbono
Raleo forestal
Biomasa forestal
Bosque secundario
Biodiversidad forestal
Artfrosur
Mendoza Vega, Jorge Doctor autor 2016
Venegas Sandoval, Andrea Doctora autora 21712
Kú Quej, V. M. Maestro autor 8365
Soto Pinto, Lorena 1958- Doctora autora 5454
De Jong, Bernardus Hendricus Jozeph Doctor autor 2038
Ramos Hernández, Silvia Guadalupe Doctora autora 14893
Effects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in Yucatan Peninsula
description Management of secondary forest can contribute to climate change mitigation through carbon storage. In the Yucatan Peninsula, forest owners practise thinning and tree enrichment with commercial species in secondary forest, with the aim of halting deforestation and raising household income. This field study assessed the effects of thinning (60% removal) and tree species enrichment in 15 to 17-year-old secondary forests in Calakmul, Yucatan Peninsula, on carbon stocks (live biomass, dead biomass and soil organic carbon (SOC)), tree species diversity and abundance and the ability of tree species to store carbon. The treatments were two thinnings (T 2), three thinnings (T 3), two thinnings plus enrichment with pepper (Pimenta dioica) (T2P), no thinning and enrichment with cedar (Cedrela odorata) and mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) (T0CM) and, natural secondary forest (NSF). There were no significant differences in total carbon stocks (live biomass C + dead biomass C + SOC) between treatments, but T 2P had significantly less live biomass C than T 2, T 3 and NSF. There were also no significant differences in tree species diversity and richness between treatments, but T 0CM differed from T 2, T 3 and NSF in terms of species abundance. In the present study some tree species with high potential to store carbon were identified. Although no increment in carbon stocks were identified at the time of the carbon stock assessment (10–12 years after thinning) with 60% removal of vegetation compared to NSF, the nursed and introduced tree species give extra benefits to landowners, with no detrimental effects on forest diversity.
format Texto
topic_facet Captura de carbono
Raleo forestal
Biomasa forestal
Bosque secundario
Biodiversidad forestal
Artfrosur
author Mendoza Vega, Jorge Doctor autor 2016
Venegas Sandoval, Andrea Doctora autora 21712
Kú Quej, V. M. Maestro autor 8365
Soto Pinto, Lorena 1958- Doctora autora 5454
De Jong, Bernardus Hendricus Jozeph Doctor autor 2038
Ramos Hernández, Silvia Guadalupe Doctora autora 14893
author_facet Mendoza Vega, Jorge Doctor autor 2016
Venegas Sandoval, Andrea Doctora autora 21712
Kú Quej, V. M. Maestro autor 8365
Soto Pinto, Lorena 1958- Doctora autora 5454
De Jong, Bernardus Hendricus Jozeph Doctor autor 2038
Ramos Hernández, Silvia Guadalupe Doctora autora 14893
author_sort Mendoza Vega, Jorge Doctor autor 2016
title Effects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in Yucatan Peninsula
title_short Effects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in Yucatan Peninsula
title_full Effects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in Yucatan Peninsula
title_fullStr Effects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in Yucatan Peninsula
title_full_unstemmed Effects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in Yucatan Peninsula
title_sort effects of thinning and tree enrichment on carbon stocks and tree species diversity in a secondary semi‑evergreen tropical forest in yucatan peninsula
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s11056-023-09975-9
work_keys_str_mv AT mendozavegajorgedoctorautor2016 effectsofthinningandtreeenrichmentoncarbonstocksandtreespeciesdiversityinasecondarysemievergreentropicalforestinyucatanpeninsula
AT venegassandovalandreadoctoraautora21712 effectsofthinningandtreeenrichmentoncarbonstocksandtreespeciesdiversityinasecondarysemievergreentropicalforestinyucatanpeninsula
AT kuquejvmmaestroautor8365 effectsofthinningandtreeenrichmentoncarbonstocksandtreespeciesdiversityinasecondarysemievergreentropicalforestinyucatanpeninsula
AT sotopintolorena1958doctoraautora5454 effectsofthinningandtreeenrichmentoncarbonstocksandtreespeciesdiversityinasecondarysemievergreentropicalforestinyucatanpeninsula
AT dejongbernardushendricusjozephdoctorautor2038 effectsofthinningandtreeenrichmentoncarbonstocksandtreespeciesdiversityinasecondarysemievergreentropicalforestinyucatanpeninsula
AT ramoshernandezsilviaguadalupedoctoraautora14893 effectsofthinningandtreeenrichmentoncarbonstocksandtreespeciesdiversityinasecondarysemievergreentropicalforestinyucatanpeninsula
_version_ 1794792460320243712