Authors
Oliver L Phillips, Roel JW Brienen, RAINFOR collaboration
Publication date
2017/12
Journal
Carbon Balance and Management
Volume
12
Pages
1-9
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Description
Background
Several independent lines of evidence suggest that Amazon forests have provided a significant carbon sink service, and also that the Amazon carbon sink in intact, mature forests may now be threatened as a result of different processes. There has however been no work done to quantify non-land-use-change forest carbon fluxes on a national basis within Amazonia, or to place these national fluxes and their possible changes in the context of the major anthropogenic carbon fluxes in the region. Here we present a first attempt to interpret results from ground-based monitoring of mature forest carbon fluxes in a biogeographically, politically, and temporally differentiated way. Specifically, using results from a large long-term network of forest plots, we estimate the Amazon biomass carbon balance over the last three decades for the different regions and nine nations of Amazonia …
Total citations
20162017201820192020202120222023202416101891924308
Scholar articles
OL Phillips, RJW Brienen, RAINFOR collaboration - Carbon Balance and Management, 2017