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Linking Landscape-Scale Carbon Monitoring with Forest Management

Richard Birdsey, USDA Forest Service, rbirdsey@fs.fed.us (Presenting)
Michael Ryan, USDA Forest Service, mryan@fs.fed.us
Marie-Louise Smith, USDA Forest Service, marielouisesmith@fs.fed.us
Randall Kolka, USDA Forest Service, rkolka@fs.fed.us
Steven McNulty, USDA Forest Service, smcnulty@fa.fed.us
John Hom, USDA Forest Service, jhom@fs.fed.us
Chris Potter, NASA, cpotter@mail.arc.nasa.gov
Michael Lefsky, Colorado State University, lefsky@cnr.colostate.edu
John Bradford, USDA Forest Service, jbbradford@fs.fed.us
Peter Weishampel, University of Minnesota, peter.weishampel@gmail.com

We are integrating intensive ground-based measurements, remote sensing, and modeling at seven landscape-scale research sites across the U.S. to estimate carbon stocks and fluxes for forest carbon pools. As part of the North American Carbon Program, this study is intended to tie the spatially extensive, but coarsely resolved, measurements made through remote sensing and forest inventory to the spatially intensive and highly resolved measurements made at intensive monitoring sites such as the AmeriFlux network. Each study site consists of a diverse landscape that reflects the effects of natural disturbances and/or forest management activities on carbon stocks and productivity. To demonstrate the relevance of this work to land managers, we are evaluating how this information can improve decision support tools for estimating and reporting carbon stocks and changes in carbon stocks. The main products of this research include precise statistical estimates and maps of carbon stocks and productivity for a variety of forest landscape conditions; improved process models at ecoregion and stand scales; and decision-support tools for land managers interested in carbon management. We will estimate NPP and NEP for managed or disturbed tree stands in various stages of development, which will improve the ability of land managers to update or project stand-level inventories of carbon stocks for project evaluation and reporting to greenhouse gas registries. Reference data from these sites can be used by the scientific, policy, and land management communities. If successful, this project may evolve into a larger network of landscape-scale monitoring sites.

Presentation Type:  Poster

Abstract ID: 39

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