COS 61-5 - Forest restoration, carcoal, and carbon storage in the Rocky Mountain West

Wednesday, August 8, 2007: 9:20 AM
J2, San Jose McEnery Convention Center
Thomas H. DeLuca, School of Environment, Natural Resources and Geography, Bangor University, Bangor, United Kingdom and Gregory H. Aplet, The Wilderness Society, Denver, CO
Charcoal is a stable form of C generated during fire events and is one of the few legacies of fire recorded in the soil profile; however, the significance of this material as a form of C storage in forest ecosystems has received only limited scientific attention.  In this paper we report on C storage as charcoal in fire maintained forest ecosystems of the Rocky Mountain West and discuss the role of forest restoration in returning fire and charcoal to the landscape. Charcoal is a uniquely stable form of organic matter and has numerous attributes (high surface area, porosity, high sorption capacity) that make it a critical component of forest soils that otherwise have limited humus contents.  Charcoal is formed at a rate of about 1 – 10 % of total biomass consumed during wildfire events in temperate forests.  This provides the soil with the immediate storage of a passive, non-cycling form of C.  Charcoal accounts for about 15% of total soil C in seasonally dry ponderosa pine/Douglas-fir forests of western MontanaForest restoration efforts that include prescribed fire will store 0.2 – 1.1 Mg C ha-1 as charcoal.  Subsequent surface fires will continue to store C with little loss of tree biomass C to fire.  Forest restoration in this region must include prescribed fire as a management tool to reduce surface fuel loading, stimulate nutrient turnover, and allow for charcoal deposition.
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