Carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the Transamazon highway.

Secondary tropical forest regrowth in abandoned agricultural areas is becoming a key element in the mitigation of global and regional climate change. In this study we focus on estimating the total aboveground biomass stored in secondary forests of distinct successional stages, following traditional cultivation by smallholders settled along the Transamazon highway, in Pará, Brazil. The study site is one of the several areas in the Amazon region assisted by the Brazilian government program called "Proambiente". Different actions have been developed by Proambiente wit the overall objective of conserving natural resources while enhancing sustainable production systems. In this study, ten small farms were investigated. Each area was georeferenced and land cover was classified based on Landsat TM images. Land use histories were obtained from interviews with the farmers. Eleven secondary forest patches with areas larger than 5ha were classified as initial or advanced stages, according to their structural attributes. A matere forest site was also studied for comparison. Three nested plots were established for each sampled area (i.e., squares of 10 x 10m, 3 x 3, and 1 x 1m). Aboveground biomass was estimated by a general model for the 573 stems measured in diameter and height. Altrough general models may present limitations, they can be useful as a first a approximation in the broad perspective of our study. Mean aboveground biomass was estimated as 45Mg ha-1 (SD=27) for forests in the initial successional stage and 100Mg ha-1 (SD=60) for forests in the advanced successional stage. Simulations for hypothetical farms with total area of 100ha showed a potential carbon sequestration varying from 937 tons of carbon (12.5% of the area with forests in the initial and 12.5% in the advanced stage) to 125 tons of carbon (5% of the area with successional forest in the initial stage). More than creating expectations towards a successful scenario of a global carbon market, these results can contribute to an assessment of environmental services provided by secondary forests in the Brazilian Amazon.

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Main Authors: FERREIRA, J., BATISTELLA, M.
Other Authors: Joice Ferreira (Embrapa Amazônia Oriental); Mateus Batistella (Embrapa Monitoramento por Satélite).
Format: Anais e Proceedings de eventos biblioteca
Language:pt_BR
por
Published: 2008-03-13
Subjects:Environmental Services, Carbon storage, Abivegriund biomass, Brazilian Amamon,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/17639
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spelling dig-alice-doc-176392017-08-16T00:30:43Z Carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the Transamazon highway. FERREIRA, J. BATISTELLA, M. Joice Ferreira (Embrapa Amazônia Oriental); Mateus Batistella (Embrapa Monitoramento por Satélite). Environmental Services Carbon storage Abivegriund biomass Brazilian Amamon Secondary tropical forest regrowth in abandoned agricultural areas is becoming a key element in the mitigation of global and regional climate change. In this study we focus on estimating the total aboveground biomass stored in secondary forests of distinct successional stages, following traditional cultivation by smallholders settled along the Transamazon highway, in Pará, Brazil. The study site is one of the several areas in the Amazon region assisted by the Brazilian government program called "Proambiente". Different actions have been developed by Proambiente wit the overall objective of conserving natural resources while enhancing sustainable production systems. In this study, ten small farms were investigated. Each area was georeferenced and land cover was classified based on Landsat TM images. Land use histories were obtained from interviews with the farmers. Eleven secondary forest patches with areas larger than 5ha were classified as initial or advanced stages, according to their structural attributes. A matere forest site was also studied for comparison. Three nested plots were established for each sampled area (i.e., squares of 10 x 10m, 3 x 3, and 1 x 1m). Aboveground biomass was estimated by a general model for the 573 stems measured in diameter and height. Altrough general models may present limitations, they can be useful as a first a approximation in the broad perspective of our study. Mean aboveground biomass was estimated as 45Mg ha-1 (SD=27) for forests in the initial successional stage and 100Mg ha-1 (SD=60) for forests in the advanced successional stage. Simulations for hypothetical farms with total area of 100ha showed a potential carbon sequestration varying from 937 tons of carbon (12.5% of the area with forests in the initial and 12.5% in the advanced stage) to 125 tons of carbon (5% of the area with successional forest in the initial stage). More than creating expectations towards a successful scenario of a global carbon market, these results can contribute to an assessment of environmental services provided by secondary forests in the Brazilian Amazon. 2014-08-23T06:52:57Z 2014-08-23T06:52:57Z 2008-03-13 2007 2014-08-23T06:52:57Z Anais e Proceedings de eventos In: CONFERÊNCIA REGIONAL SOBRE MUDANÇAS GLOBAIS: AMÉRICA DO SUL, 3., 2007. São Paulo. Resumos... São Paulo: IEA Instituto de Estudos Avançados da Universidade de São Paulo, 2007. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/17639 pt_BR por openAccess 1 p.
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language pt_BR
por
topic Environmental Services
Carbon storage
Abivegriund biomass
Brazilian Amamon
Environmental Services
Carbon storage
Abivegriund biomass
Brazilian Amamon
spellingShingle Environmental Services
Carbon storage
Abivegriund biomass
Brazilian Amamon
Environmental Services
Carbon storage
Abivegriund biomass
Brazilian Amamon
FERREIRA, J.
BATISTELLA, M.
Carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the Transamazon highway.
description Secondary tropical forest regrowth in abandoned agricultural areas is becoming a key element in the mitigation of global and regional climate change. In this study we focus on estimating the total aboveground biomass stored in secondary forests of distinct successional stages, following traditional cultivation by smallholders settled along the Transamazon highway, in Pará, Brazil. The study site is one of the several areas in the Amazon region assisted by the Brazilian government program called "Proambiente". Different actions have been developed by Proambiente wit the overall objective of conserving natural resources while enhancing sustainable production systems. In this study, ten small farms were investigated. Each area was georeferenced and land cover was classified based on Landsat TM images. Land use histories were obtained from interviews with the farmers. Eleven secondary forest patches with areas larger than 5ha were classified as initial or advanced stages, according to their structural attributes. A matere forest site was also studied for comparison. Three nested plots were established for each sampled area (i.e., squares of 10 x 10m, 3 x 3, and 1 x 1m). Aboveground biomass was estimated by a general model for the 573 stems measured in diameter and height. Altrough general models may present limitations, they can be useful as a first a approximation in the broad perspective of our study. Mean aboveground biomass was estimated as 45Mg ha-1 (SD=27) for forests in the initial successional stage and 100Mg ha-1 (SD=60) for forests in the advanced successional stage. Simulations for hypothetical farms with total area of 100ha showed a potential carbon sequestration varying from 937 tons of carbon (12.5% of the area with forests in the initial and 12.5% in the advanced stage) to 125 tons of carbon (5% of the area with successional forest in the initial stage). More than creating expectations towards a successful scenario of a global carbon market, these results can contribute to an assessment of environmental services provided by secondary forests in the Brazilian Amazon.
author2 Joice Ferreira (Embrapa Amazônia Oriental); Mateus Batistella (Embrapa Monitoramento por Satélite).
author_facet Joice Ferreira (Embrapa Amazônia Oriental); Mateus Batistella (Embrapa Monitoramento por Satélite).
FERREIRA, J.
BATISTELLA, M.
format Anais e Proceedings de eventos
topic_facet Environmental Services
Carbon storage
Abivegriund biomass
Brazilian Amamon
author FERREIRA, J.
BATISTELLA, M.
author_sort FERREIRA, J.
title Carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the Transamazon highway.
title_short Carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the Transamazon highway.
title_full Carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the Transamazon highway.
title_fullStr Carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the Transamazon highway.
title_full_unstemmed Carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the Transamazon highway.
title_sort carbon sequestration by secondary forests at small farms along the transamazon highway.
publishDate 2008-03-13
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/17639
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