CARBON CAPTURE BY FORESTS
- February 27, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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CARBON CAPTURE BY FORESTS
TOPIC: Environment
Context- Conservationists have noted plantations outside forest don’t capture carbon efficiently or make up for biodiversity losses.
- Trees on forest edges may grow faster than those inside.
Concept-
Forests as Storehouses of carbon:
- The forest in the world that are major storehouses of carbon.
- In net, forests store more carbon dioxide than they release and an estimated 30% of carbon emissions from emitting fossil fuels are absorbed by the forest, making them a terrestrial carbon sink.
- Trees absorb carbon dioxide (CO2), release oxygen by way of photosynthesis, and store carbon in their trunks.
- When they shed, soil microbes work to decompose the leaves and other organic matter that releases the trapped carbon dioxide.
Differential growth:
- Data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Inventory and Analysis program found trees on the forest edges grow nearly twice as fast as interior trees.
- This is likely because the trees on the edge don’t have competition with interior forest, so they get more light.
Soil behaviour:
- Warmer temperatures at the edge of the forest caused leaves and organic matter to decompose faster, as it forced soil microorganisms to work harder and release more carbon dioxide than their cooler, more shaded peers in the forest interior.
Role of plantations:
- Plantations like western ghats deplete groundwater, have higher surface water runoff, poorer soil infiltration, compared to trees in natural forests.
- The carbon stocks in plantations such as teak and eucalyptus were 30% to 50% lower than in natural evergreen forests.
- They are generally less stable and resilient.
- The biggest loss, however, is that of species dependent on forests— from insects to primates— are ripped apart from their natural habitats and plantations, which are mostly monocultures, rarely had the capacity to support a rich, biodiverse system.