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Variation in ages and growth rates of trees in Amazonian tropical forests: consequences for carbon and forest management Simone Vieira, Plínio Camargo,

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Presentation on theme: "Variation in ages and growth rates of trees in Amazonian tropical forests: consequences for carbon and forest management Simone Vieira, Plínio Camargo,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Variation in ages and growth rates of trees in Amazonian tropical forests: consequences for carbon and forest management Simone Vieira, Plínio Camargo, Luiz Martinelli (CENA) Susan Trumbore (UCI), Jeff Chambers (Tulane), Niro Higuchi (INPA) Diogo Selhorst, Foster Brown (SETEM)

2 Our questions – CD-08 What is the capacity for these forests to store C? Where could it be stored and for how long? Our approach – CD-08 Look at components of C fluxes: This specific work: changes in living tree C stocks, and the environmental variables that control them. Use radiocarbon to determine the residence time of carbon in trees and soils

3 Manaus ZF2 Reserve Rio Branco - Catuaba Exp. Farm Santarém Tapajos National Forest

4 Rio Branco Manaus Santarém Field sites All terra firme forest Soils are Oxisols Variation in dry season length Shortest in Manaus, longer in Rio Branco, Santarém

5 Trees How old are tropical trees? How fast do they grow? How long do they store carbon? How do characteristics vary across the Amazon basin?

6 Measurement of tree diameter during establishment of permanent plot

7 Stem frequency in DBH Class (stem ha -1 ) Manaus (626), Rio Branco (467) and Santarém (460)

8 Biomass (Mg ha -1 ) Tree diameter class (cm) Not all forests in the Amazon are equal Manaus has more biomass overall, in smaller trees, than sites with a more pronounced dry season Manaus Rio Branco Santarém 626 466 460 trees ha -1 180 95 141 Mg C ha -1 40 45 56 cm (DBH mean) Vieira et al., 2004

9 Growth rates from dendrometer bands

10 Growth rates vary seasonally with rainfall, though not simply Mean annual growth increment – Manaus 1.7 mm yr -1 Rio Branco 3.8 mm yr -1 Santarém 3.1 mm yr -1 Biomass increment in living trees ~ 2 Mg C ha -1 yr -1 all three sites

11 Radiocarbon Sample

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13 Tree age (radiocarbon)

14 Radiocarbon and dendrometer based estimates of growth agree mm/yr from dendrometer bands mm/yr from DBH and radiocarbon age >50cm 30-50cm 10-30cm Rio Branco Manaus Santarem 1:1

15 Big trees grow faster than small trees mm/yr from dendrometer bands mm/yr from DBH and radiocarbon age >50cm 30-50cm 10-30cm Rio Branco Manaus Santarem 1:1

16 Trees in Manaus (central Amazon) grow much slower than other areas mm/yr from dendrometer bands mm/yr from DBH and radiocarbon age >50cm 30-50cm 10-30cm Rio Branco Manaus Santarem 1:1

17 Mean age – Manaus 422 years Rio Branco 332 years Santarém 271 years

18 No Individuals/ ha Manaus SantarémRio Branco Trees can be old Extrapolating growth rates, we estimate >20% of all trees and 15-35% of trees 10-30 cm diameter are >300 yrs old Age of individuals estimated from diameter/growth rate (yr)

19 Limited radiocarbon data available agree qualitatively with age structure based on Monte Carlo extrapolation of dendrometer growth rates % of individuals with age >300 years

20 Trees 45years Basal age (years) from radiocarbon No of individuals

21 Manaus Santarém Rio Branco Individuals/ha 626 460 466 Biomass C MgC/ha 180 141 95 Growth MgC/ha/yr 1.6-2.1 2.2 -3.0 3.3-3.4 Mean age of C (yr)* 260 220 240 MRT of C (stock/growth)** 114 74 53 * From monte carlo simulations **biomass-weighted Data from Vieira et al. 2004 C dynamics differ with forest location

22 Low carbon use efficiency (NPP/GPP ~ 30% at Manaus and Santarém sites) Low carbon use efficiency (NPP/GPP ~ 30% at Manaus and Santarém sites) ~25% of NPP used for wood growth at Manaus (data pending for other sites) ~25% of NPP used for wood growth at Manaus (data pending for other sites) Although biomass may recover quickly through fast-growing pioneer species, slow growing species (therefore biodiversity) will take centuries to recover from disturbance Although biomass may recover quickly through fast-growing pioneer species, slow growing species (therefore biodiversity) will take centuries to recover from disturbance Implications of low growth rates:

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