OOS 37 - Vulnerability and Resilience of Ecosystem Carbon and Biodiversity to Climate Change and Deforestation in the Asia-Pacific Region

Wednesday, August 4, 2010: 1:30 PM-5:00 PM
325, David L Lawrence Convention Center
Organizer:
Yude Pan, Forest Service
Co-organizers:
Richard Birdsey, Forest Service; and Anping Chen, Princeton University
Moderator:
Yude Pan, Forest Service
The Asia-Pacific region is highly vulnerable and sensitive to climate change and has experienced unusual climate variability in recent decades such as tropical cyclones, rainfall extremes, frequent droughts, and extreme tides. The additional pressure of climate change on ecosystem and threats to sustainability of natural resources, coupled with high population density in many areas, creates an exceptional risk to humanity as population continues to expand and economic development moves forward at a rapid pace. This session focuses on two critical ecological issues in the Asia-Pacific region: to understand complex impacts of environmental changes and increased disturbances on ecosystem structure, function and diversity; and to examine the vulnerability and resilience of ecosystems under these stresses. Presentation topics include the climate-ecosystem interaction, deforestation, ecosystem carbon budgets, biodiversity, biotic invasion and species shifting in response to the changed climate. Mitigation and adaptation responses such as the UN-REDD (United Nations Collaborative Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries) are also discussed. The studies presented in this session aim to put the regional picture into the global perspective and offer useful insights and emerging scientific results for ecologists in North America.
1:30 PM
 Controls on soil CO2 efflux in a forest and rubber plantation in Xishuangbanna, SW China
Matthew W. Warren, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Xiaoming Zou, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras; Douglas A. Schaefer, Key Laboratory of Tropical Forest Ecology; Jin Chen, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences
2:10 PM
 Vulnerability and resilience of the forest ecosystem carbon cycle in Australia
Heather Keith, Australian National University; Brendan G. Mackey, Griffith University; Sandra L. Berry, Australian National University
2:30 PM
 Worldwide changes in tropical forest ecosystems
Oliver Phillips, University of Leeds; S.L. Lewis, University of Leeds; Rainfor Network, Multiple Institutions; Afritron Network, Multiple Institutions
2:50 PM
 Climate change, land use, and intercontinental biotic invasions
Qinfeng Guo, USDA Forest Service - Southern Research Station
3:10 PM
3:40 PM
 Exceptionally high carbon storage in Indo-Pacific mangroves: Implications of sea level rise, land use, and global carbon markets
Daniel Donato, USDA Forest Service; J. Boone Kauffman, Oregon State University; Daniel Murdiyarso, Center for International Forest Research; Melanie Stidham, USDA Forest Service; Sofyan Kurnianto, Center for International Forest Research
4:00 PM
 Ecosystem C pools of tropical peat forests of the Asian Pacific: Vulnerability to climate change and land uses
J. Boone Kauffman, Oregon State University; Daniel Donato, USDA Forest Service; Melanie Stidham, USDA Forest Service; Sofyan Kurnianto, Center for International Forest Research; Daniel Murdiyarso, Center for International Forest Research
4:20 PM
 Forest biomass carbon sequestration in East Asia: Past and future
Jingyun Fang, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences
See more of: Organized Oral Session
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