A Comparison of Soil Carbon Stocks of Intact and Restored Mangrove Forests in Northern Vietnam
Background and Objectives: In northern Vietnam, nearly 37,100 hectares of mangroves were lost from 1964–1997 due to unsustainable harvest and deforestation for the creation of shrimp aquaculture ponds. To offset these losses, efforts in the late 1990s have resulted in thousands of hectares of mangro...
| Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
|---|---|
| Format: | Journal Article |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
MDPI
2020
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/112844 |
Similar Items: A Comparison of Soil Carbon Stocks of Intact and Restored Mangrove Forests in Northern Vietnam
- The impacts of degradation, deforestation and restoration on mangrove ecosystem carbon stocks across Cambodia
- The role of predictive model data in designing mangrove forest carbon programs
- Optimizing Carbon Stocks and Sedimentation in Indonesian Mangroves under Different Management Regimes
- Carbon stocks and fluxes in Asia-Pacific mangroves: current knowledge and gaps
- Mangrove blue carbon stocks and dynamics are controlled by hydrogeomorphic settings and land-use change
- Mangrove selective logging sustains biomass carbon recovery, soil carbon, and sediment