Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia

In terms of sink activities in the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) there is little information about carbon accumulation. This paper deals with case studies in natural young secondary forests and man made forests in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. East Kalimantan has high possibility of CDM activity,...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Diana, R., Hadriyanto, D., Hiratsuka, M., Toma, T., Morikawa, Y.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Forestry Research Institute 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18666
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author Diana, R.
Hadriyanto, D.
Hiratsuka, M.
Toma, T.
Morikawa, Y.
author_browse Diana, R.
Hadriyanto, D.
Hiratsuka, M.
Morikawa, Y.
Toma, T.
author_facet Diana, R.
Hadriyanto, D.
Hiratsuka, M.
Toma, T.
Morikawa, Y.
author_sort Diana, R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In terms of sink activities in the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) there is little information about carbon accumulation. This paper deals with case studies in natural young secondary forests and man made forests in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. East Kalimantan has high possibility of CDM activity, because of degraded lands extend widely in 1998. The annual carbon accumulation of pioneer secondary forest in Bukit Soeharto Educational Forest (BSEF) ranged from 1.3 to 2.9 t C/ha/yr in 2000. However, the rate decreased in 2001 except for Macaranga gigantea dominated stands. These figures were higher than those of regenerated vegetation in degraded land with herbs, shrubs and Imperata cylindrica grassland. On the other hand, annual carbon accumulation of Acacia mangium, eucalyptus pelitta and Gmelia arborea were 5.9-9.9, 7.1-7.2, and 8.3-12.3 t C/ha/yr respectively. Highly degraded vegetations would be the target site for CDM projects. Naturally regenerated forests are not suitable for CDM project because of their high baseline.
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spelling CGSpace186662025-01-24T14:12:36Z Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia Diana, R. Hadriyanto, D. Hiratsuka, M. Toma, T. Morikawa, Y. clean development mechanism carbon sequestration biomass degraded land secondary forests forest plantations conferences In terms of sink activities in the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) there is little information about carbon accumulation. This paper deals with case studies in natural young secondary forests and man made forests in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. East Kalimantan has high possibility of CDM activity, because of degraded lands extend widely in 1998. The annual carbon accumulation of pioneer secondary forest in Bukit Soeharto Educational Forest (BSEF) ranged from 1.3 to 2.9 t C/ha/yr in 2000. However, the rate decreased in 2001 except for Macaranga gigantea dominated stands. These figures were higher than those of regenerated vegetation in degraded land with herbs, shrubs and Imperata cylindrica grassland. On the other hand, annual carbon accumulation of Acacia mangium, eucalyptus pelitta and Gmelia arborea were 5.9-9.9, 7.1-7.2, and 8.3-12.3 t C/ha/yr respectively. Highly degraded vegetations would be the target site for CDM projects. Naturally regenerated forests are not suitable for CDM project because of their high baseline. 2002 2012-06-04T09:08:40Z 2012-06-04T09:08:40Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18666 en Forestry Research Institute Diana, R., Hadriyanto, D., Hiratsuka, M., Toma, T., Morikawa, Y. 2002. Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia . TFRI Extension Series No.153. In: Kuo-chuan Lin, Jiun-cheng Lin, Hsing-yin Huang (eds.). Proceedings of International Symposium on Forest Carbon Sequestration and Monitoring, November 11-15, 2002 Taipei, Taiwan.. :19-24. Taipei, Taiwan, Forestry Research Institute. ISBN: 579-01-2475-X..
spellingShingle clean development mechanism
carbon sequestration
biomass
degraded land
secondary forests
forest plantations
conferences
Diana, R.
Hadriyanto, D.
Hiratsuka, M.
Toma, T.
Morikawa, Y.
Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia
title Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia
title_full Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia
title_fullStr Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia
title_short Carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east Kalimantan, Indonesia
title_sort carbon stocks of fast growing tree species and baselines after forest fire in east kalimantan indonesia
topic clean development mechanism
carbon sequestration
biomass
degraded land
secondary forests
forest plantations
conferences
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18666
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