Co-assessment of biomass and soil organic carbon stocks in a future reservoir area located in Southeast Asia

Share this
An assessment of the organic carbon stock present in living or dead vegetation and in the soil on the 450 km(2) of the future Nam Theun 2 hydroelectric reservoir in Lao People's Democratic Republic was made. Nine land cover types were defined on the studied area: dense, medium, light, degraded, and riparian forests; agricultural soil; swamps; water; and others (roads, construction sites, and so on). Their geographical distribution was assessed by remote sensing using two 2008 SPOT 5 images. The area is mainly covered by dense and light forests (59%), while agricultural soil and swamps account for 11% and 2%, respectively. For each of these cover types, except water, organic carbon density was measured in the five pools defined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change: aboveground biomass, litter, deadwood, belowground biomass, and soil organic carbon. The area-weighted mean carbon densities for these pools were estimated at 45.4, 2.0, 2.2, 3.4, and 62.2 tC/ha, respectively, i.e., a total of about 115 15 tC/ha for a soil thickness of 30 cm, corresponding to a total flooded organic carbon stock of 5.1 +/- 0.7 MtC. This value is much lower than the carbon density for some South American reservoirs for example where total organic carbon stocks range from 251 to 326 tC/ha. It can be mainly explained by (1) the higher biomass density of South American tropical primary rainforest than of forests in this study and (2) the high proportion of areas with low carbon density, such as agricultural or slash-and-burn zones, in the studied area. View source
Year

2011

Secondary Title

Environmental Monitoring and Assessment

Volume

173

Number

1-4

Pages

723-741

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-010-1418-3

Language

Keyword(s)

Aboveground and belowground biomass, Subtropical reservoir, Remote, sensing, Nam Theun 2 reservoir, greenhouse-gas emissions, saut french-guiana, petit saut, rain-forest, hydroelectric reservoirs, aboveground biomass, lidar, decomposition, vegetation, temperate, Environmental Sciences & Ecology

Classification
Form: Journal Article
Geographical Area: Laos

Supporter & Funder