Forests (Apr 2024)

Effects of Different Thinning Intensities on Carbon Storage in <i>Pinus koraiensis</i> Middle-Aged Plantations in Northeast China

  • Nazmus Sakib,
  • Tika Ram Poudel,
  • Yuanqin Hao,
  • Nathan James Roberts,
  • Abdul-Qadir Iddrisu,
  • Saraswoti Adhikari,
  • Peng Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f15050738
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 5
p. 738

Abstract

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Forest ecosystems are essential to the global carbon cycle because they are the biggest terrestrial carbon reserves. In the management of forests, thinning is a commonly employed strategy, impacting the respiration and biomass loss of trees, thereby modifying forest carbon dynamics. However, there is a lack of scientific research to confirm the impacts of thinning intensities on carbon storage in trees, soil layers, shrubs, and ground vegetation layers as well as its impact on wood production and growth rate. The goal of this study was to find the optimal thinning levels for increasing carbon sequestration during the growth stage of the Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis) middle-aged plantations in Northeast China. In this study, thinning intensity (0, 10, 11, 16, 18, and 22%) affected the carbon storage of trees, tree growth, volume, and, we suspected, soil layer, shrubs, and vegetation (herbs, litter, and grass) also. Specifically, after four years of thinning, the 18% treatment significantly increased total carbon storage, individual organ storage, growth, and tree volume (p P. koraiensis plantations, contributing to multi-objective management strategies for optimizing carbon sequestration, wood production, and ecosystem health.

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