Forests (Aug 2024)

Association of Carbon Pool with Vegetation Composition along the Elevation Gradients in Subtropical Forests in Pakistan

  • Inam Khan,
  • Umer Hayat,
  • Gao Lushuang,
  • Faiza Khan,
  • He Xinyi,
  • Wu Shufan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f15081395
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
p. 1395

Abstract

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As the most important way to mitigate climate change, forest carbon storage has been the subject of extensive research. A comprehensive study was carried out to investigate the influence of elevation gradients and diameter classes on the forest growth, composition, diversity, and carbon pools of the Bagh Drush Khel Forest area. Research revealed that elevation gradients significantly influenced the composition, diversity, and carbon pools in forests. At lower elevations, Eucalyptus camaldulensis was the dominant species, with Olea ferruginea as a co-dominant species, whereas at higher elevations, Pinus roxburghii was the dominant species with Quercus incana as a co-dominant species. Regeneration was higher at higher elevations with the maximum number of saplings and seedlings of P. roxburghii. Species diversity association with elevation was negative (R2 = −0.44; p 2 = 0.37; p 2 = −0.73; p 2 = −0.45; p 2 = 0.25; p 2 = 0.11; p 2 = −0.25; p < 0.05), and no effect was observed for DBH classes. The highest carbon stock (845.89 t C/ha) was calculated at low elevations, which decreased to (516.27 t C/ha) at high elevations. The overall carbon stock calculated was (2016.41 t C/ha) respectively. A total of six tree species were found at the study site. Future research is essential for forest health monitoring and understanding fine-scale impacts. This study offers a methodological framework for similar investigations in unexplored yet potentially significant forest regions worldwide.

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