Carbon Balance Manag
December 2021
Background: Land clearing generates coarse woody debris (CWD), much of which ultimately becomes atmospheric CO. Schemes for greenhouse gas accounting must consider the contribution from land clearing, but the timing of the contribution will have large uncertainty, due to a paucity of knowledge about the rate of CWD disappearance. To better understand above-ground CWD disappearance following a land clearing event-through the actions of microorganisms, invertebrates, wildfire, or deliberate burning-we combined statistical modelling with an archive of semi-quantitative observations (units of CWD %), made within Queensland, Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe accurate assessment of trends in the woody structure of savannas has important implications for greenhouse accounting and land-use industries such as pastoralism. Two recent assessments of live woody biomass change from north-east Australian eucalypt woodland between the 1980s and 1990s present divergent results. The first estimate is derived from a network of permanent monitoring plots and the second from woody cover assessments from aerial photography.
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