Authors
Béatrice Wedeux, Michele Dalponte, Michael Schlund, Stephen Hagen, Mark Cochrane, Laura Graham, Aswin Usup, Andri Thomas, David Coomes
Publication date
2020/7
Journal
Global change biology
Volume
26
Issue
7
Pages
3947-3964
Description
Tropical peat swamp forests (PSFs) are globally important carbon stores under threat. In Southeast Asia, 35% of peatlands had been drained and converted to plantations by 2010, and much of the remaining forest had been logged, contributing significantly to global carbon emissions. Yet, tropical forests have the capacity to regain biomass quickly and forests on drained peatlands may grow faster in response to soil aeration, so the net effect of humans on forest biomass remains poorly understood. In this study, two lidar surveys (made in 2011 and 2014) are compared to map forest biomass dynamics across 96 km2 of PSF in Kalimantan, Indonesia. The peatland is now legally protected for conservation, but large expanses were logged under concessions until 1998 and illegal logging continues in accessible portions. It was hypothesized that historically logged areas would be recovering biomass while recently …
Total citations
2020202120222023202426535
Scholar articles