Linking landscape-scale carbon monitoring with forest management
PARTNERS: USDA Forest Service Northern Global Change Program (NGCP)
SUMMARY: The USDA Global Climate Change Program has recently funded several pilot projects to examine the potential of sites with intensive ground-based measurements to aid in the development of landscape level carbon flux estimates. The sites, termed “Tier 3” sites in the North American Carbon Program, are 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 AmeriFlux sites. Eddy-flux measurements from two North Carolina loblolly pine plantations are part of the Tier III network and a separate study by Rich Birdsey (NGCP) to more fully develop the potential for connecting intensive and extensive monitoring and increase the ability to develop accurate terrestrial carbon budgets for various forest management and disturbance scenarios. This research will extend ground-based measurements across additional levels of forest management intensity by adding LiDAR measurements, developing ecosystem process models at two distinct scales, and linking landscape monitoring to carbon management at a scale relevant to land managers. The duration for this research study is estimated at five to ten years. 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.
STATUS: Ongoing
PROGRESS:
Rich Birdsey. 2004. Data gaps for monitoring forest carbon in the United States: an inventory perspective. Environmental Management 33: S1-8.
LINKS: Northern Global Change Program
CONTACT: Steve McNulty, EFETAC Southern Global Change Program Team Leader, steve_mcnulty@ncsu.edu or 919-515-9489


