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Woody Debris Volume Depletion Through Decay: Implications for Biomass and Carbon Accounting

Authors:

Shawn Fraver

Amy Milo

John Bradford

Anthony D'Amato

Laura Kenefic

Brian Palik

Christopher Woodall

John Brissette

+3 more
Publication Type:
Journal Article
Year of Publication:
2013
Secondary Title:
Ecosystems
ISSN:
1435-0629
DOI:
10.1007/s10021-013-9682-z
Pages:
1262-1272
Volume:
16
Year:
2013
Date:
11/2013

Abstract

Woody debris decay rates have recently received much attention because of the need to quantify temporal changes in forest carbon stocks. Published decay rates, available for many species, are commonly used to characterize deadwood biomass and carbon depletion. However, decay rates are often derived from reductions in wood density through time, which when used to model biomass and carbon depletion are known to underestimate rate loss because they fail to account for volume reduction (changes in log shape) as decay progresses. We present a method for estimating changes in log volume through time and illustrate the method using a chronosequence approach. The method is based on the observation, confirmed herein, that decaying logs have a collapse ratio (cross-sectional height/width) that can serve as a surrogate for the volume remaining. Combining the resulting volume loss with concurrent changes in wood density from the same logs then allowed us to quantify biomass and carbon depletion for three study species. Results show that volume, density, and biomass follow distinct depletion curves during decomposition. Volume showed an initial lag period (log dimensions remained unchanged), even while wood density was being reduced. However, once volume depletion began, biomass loss (the product of density and volume depletion) occurred much more rapidly than density alone. At the temporal limit of our data, the proportion of the biomass remaining was roughly half that of the density remaining. Accounting for log volume depletion, as demonstrated in this study, provides a comprehensive characterization of deadwood decomposition, thereby improving biomass-loss and carbon-accounting models.