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      Integrated carbon analysis of forest management practices and wood substitution

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          The operated Markov´s chains in economy (discrete chains of Markov with the income)

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            Respiration as the main determinant of carbon balance in European forests.

            Carbon exchange between the terrestrial biosphere and the atmosphere is one of the key processes that need to be assessed in the context of the Kyoto Protocol. Several studies suggest that the terrestrial biosphere is gaining carbon, but these estimates are obtained primarily by indirect methods, and the factors that control terrestrial carbon exchange, its magnitude and primary locations, are under debate. Here we present data of net ecosystem carbon exchange, collected between 1996 and 1998 from 15 European forests, which confirm that many European forest ecosystems act as carbon sinks. The annual carbon balances range from an uptake of 6.6 tonnes of carbon per hectare per year to a release of nearly 1 t C ha(-1) yr(-1), with a large variability between forests. The data show a significant increase of carbon uptake with decreasing latitude, whereas the gross primary production seems to be largely independent of latitude. Our observations indicate that, in general, ecosystem respiration determines net ecosystem carbon exchange. Also, for an accurate assessment of the carbon balance in a particular forest ecosystem, remote sensing of the normalized difference vegetation index or estimates based on forest inventories may not be sufficient.
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              A large carbon sink in the woody biomass of Northern forests.

              The terrestrial carbon sink, as of yet unidentified, represents 15-30% of annual global emissions of carbon from fossil fuels and industrial activities. Some of the missing carbon is sequestered in vegetation biomass and, under the Kyoto Protocol of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, industrialized nations can use certain forest biomass sinks to meet their greenhouse gas emissions reduction commitments. Therefore, we analyzed 19 years of data from remote-sensing spacecraft and forest inventories to identify the size and location of such sinks. The results, which cover the years 1981-1999, reveal a picture of biomass carbon gains in Eurasian boreal and North American temperate forests and losses in some Canadian boreal forests. For the 1.42 billion hectares of Northern forests, roughly above the 30th parallel, we estimate the biomass sink to be 0.68 +/- 0.34 billion tons carbon per year, of which nearly 70% is in Eurasia, in proportion to its forest area and in disproportion to its biomass carbon pool. The relatively high spatial resolution of these estimates permits direct validation with ground data and contributes to a monitoring program of forest biomass sinks under the Kyoto protocol.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Canadian Journal of Forest Research
                Can. J. For. Res.
                Canadian Science Publishing
                0045-5067
                1208-6037
                March 2007
                March 2007
                : 37
                : 3
                : 671-681
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Bioenergy, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, P.O. 7060, SE 75007 Uppsala, Sweden.
                [2 ]Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Purdue University, Pfendler Hall, West Lafayette, IN, 47907 USA.
                [3 ]Ecotechnology, Mid Sweden University, SE 83125 Östersund, Sweden.
                [4 ]Unit for Field-based Forest Research, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Asa Forest Research Station, SE 36030 Lammhult, Sweden.
                [5 ]Department of Forest Soils, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, P.O. 7001, SE 75007 Uppsala, Sweden.
                Article
                10.1139/X06-257
                f16417c2-0205-482b-bea7-43018531bc31
                © 2007

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