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The regional variation of aboveground live biomass in old-growth Amazonian forests
Authors:YADVINDER MALHI  DANIEL WOOD  TIMOTHY R BAKER  JAMES WRIGHT  OLIVER L PHILLIPS  THOMAS COCHRANE  PATRICK MEIR  JEROME CHAVE  SAMUEL ALMEIDA  LUZMILLA ARROYO  NIRO HIGUCHI  TIMOTHY J KILLEEN  SUSAN G LAURANCE  WILLIAM F LAURANCE  SIMON L LEWIS  ABEL MONTEAGUDO  DAVID A NEILL  PERCY NÚÑEZ VARGAS  NIGEL C A PITMAN  CARLOS ALBERTO QUESADA  RAFAEL SALOMÃO  JOSÉ NATALINO M SILVA  ARMANDO TORRES LEZAMA  JOHN TERBORGH  RODOLFO VÁSQUEZ MARTÍNEZ  BARBARA VINCETI
Institution:Oxford University Centre for the Environment, South Parks Road, Oxford, UK,;School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Darwin Building, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh, UK,;Earth and Biosphere Institute, Geography, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK,;Department of Geography, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK,;Agteca, Casilla Postal 6329, Santa Cruz, Bolivia,;Laboratoire Evolution et DiversitéBiologique, CNRS/UPS, Toulouse, France,;Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi, Belém, Brazil,;Museo Noel Kempff Mercado, Santa Cruz, Bolivia,;Instituto National de Pesquisas Amazônicas, Manaus, Brazil,;Center for Applied Biodiversity Science, Conservation International, Washington, DC, USA,;Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Panama,;Herbario Vargas, Universidad Nacional San Antonio Abad del Cusco, Cusco, Peru,;Proyecto Flora del Perú, Jardin Botanico de Missouri, Oxapampa, Perú,;Fundacion Jatun Sacha, Quito, Ecuador,;Herbario Vargas, Universidad Nacional San Antonio Abad del Cusco, Cusco, Peru,;Center for Tropical Conservation, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA,;CIFOR, Tapajos, Brazil,;EMBRAPA Amazonia Oriental, Belém, Brazil,;INDEFOR, Facultad de Ciencias Forestales y Ambientale, Universidad de Los Andes, Mérida, Venezuela,;International Plant Genetic Resources Institute, Rome, Italy
Abstract:The biomass of tropical forests plays an important role in the global carbon cycle, both as a dynamic reservoir of carbon, and as a source of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere in areas undergoing deforestation. However, the absolute magnitude and environmental determinants of tropical forest biomass are still poorly understood. Here, we present a new synthesis and interpolation of the basal area and aboveground live biomass of old‐growth lowland tropical forests across South America, based on data from 227 forest plots, many previously unpublished. Forest biomass was analyzed in terms of two uncorrelated factors: basal area and mean wood density. Basal area is strongly affected by local landscape factors, but is relatively invariant at regional scale in moist tropical forests, and declines significantly at the dry periphery of the forest zone. Mean wood density is inversely correlated with forest dynamics, being lower in the dynamic forests of western Amazonia and high in the slow‐growing forests of eastern Amazonia. The combination of these two factors results in biomass being highest in the moderately seasonal, slow growing forests of central Amazonia and the Guyanas (up to 350 Mg dry weight ha?1) and declining to 200–250 Mg dry weight ha?1 at the western, southern and eastern margins. Overall, we estimate the total aboveground live biomass of intact Amazonian rainforests (area 5.76 × 106 km2 in 2000) to be 93±23 Pg C, taking into account lianas and small trees. Including dead biomass and belowground biomass would increase this value by approximately 10% and 21%, respectively, but the spatial variation of these additional terms still needs to be quantified.
Keywords:Amazonia  biomass  carbon  soil fertility  tropical forests  wood density
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