Dead Wood is Buried and Preserved in a Labrador Boreal Forest |
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Authors: | Martin Thomas Moroni Ulrike Hagemann David Wesley Beilman |
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Affiliation: | (1) Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service – Atlantic Forestry Centre, PO Box 960, Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador, A2H 6J3, Canada;(2) Present address: Forestry Tasmania, 79 Melville Street, Hobart, Tasmania, 7000, Australia;(3) Institute of Soil Science and Site Ecology, Faculty of Forest, Geo and Hydro Sciences, Dresden University of Technology, Pienner Str. 19, 01737 Tharandt, Germany;(4) CHRONO Centre for Climate, the Environment and Chronology, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast, BT9 6AX, UK;(5) Department of Geography, University of Hawai’i Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822-2223, USA |
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Abstract: | Large amounts (36.4 Mg ha−1 or 179 m3 ha−1) of buried dead wood were found in overmature (146–204-year-old) black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) forests in the high boreal region of eastern Canada. Amounts of this size indicate that burial reduces rates of wood decay producing an important component of long-term carbon (C) storage. Radiocarbon-derived ages of black spruce stems buried near the bottom of the organic soil horizon at three old-growth sites were up to 515 years old. Together with information on current stand age, this suggests that the stems have been dead for more than 250 years. Most aboveground dead wood decays or becomes fragmented within about 70 years of tree death in these forests. The presence of old yet well-preserved buried wood suggests that decay rates are greatly reduced when downed dead wood is quickly overgrown by moss. Thus, the nature and type of ground-layer vegetation influences the accumulation of organic matter in these forests. This process of dead wood burial and the resultant addition to a large and long-enduring belowground C pool should be considered when estimating dead wood abundance for habitat or forest C accounting and cycling. |
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