2015
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10158
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Degradation in carbon stocks near tropical forest edges

Abstract: Carbon stock estimates based on land cover type are critical for informing climate change assessment and landscape management, but field and theoretical evidence indicates that forest fragmentation reduces the amount of carbon stored at forest edges. Here, using remotely sensed pantropical biomass and land cover data sets, we estimate that biomass within the first 500 m of the forest edge is on average 25% lower than in forest interiors and that reductions of 10% extend to 1.5 km from the forest edge. These fi… Show more

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Cited by 176 publications
(162 citation statements)
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“…We posit that global patterns in the response of forest growth and biomass to edge effects are generally driven by a combination of increased vulnerability to disturbance (i.e., wind, drought, and fire) and an increase in light availability. Recently, an edge-related 10% decline in biomass was reported for the world's tropical forest (13), which assuming proportional declines in C uptake, would reduce the tropical forest C sink by 0.27 Pg C y −1 (1). By contrast, applying our estimated 13% edge enhancement on forest growth in southern New England to the world's temperate forest suggests that temperate forest edge effects could potentially offset 37% [0.10 Pg C y −1 (1)] of edge-related declines in the tropical forest C sink and ∼10% of global emissions from land use and land cover change (32).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We posit that global patterns in the response of forest growth and biomass to edge effects are generally driven by a combination of increased vulnerability to disturbance (i.e., wind, drought, and fire) and an increase in light availability. Recently, an edge-related 10% decline in biomass was reported for the world's tropical forest (13), which assuming proportional declines in C uptake, would reduce the tropical forest C sink by 0.27 Pg C y −1 (1). By contrast, applying our estimated 13% edge enhancement on forest growth in southern New England to the world's temperate forest suggests that temperate forest edge effects could potentially offset 37% [0.10 Pg C y −1 (1)] of edge-related declines in the tropical forest C sink and ∼10% of global emissions from land use and land cover change (32).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, the effects of deforestation on the terrestrial C cycle extend into adjacent forest fragments (10)(11)(12), with a growing body of research from tropical rainforests (10), temperate rainforests (11), and boreal forests (12) showing widespread increases in tree mortality and reductions in biomass near the forest's edge. Edges were recently associated with a 10% reduction in tropical forest C density (13), which highlights the importance of considering landscape fragmentation when quantifying regional C balance (14). Furthermore, the potential for forest edge effects to exacerbate forest response to climate extremes (15) confounds conventional understanding of feedbacks between the terrestrial C cycle and climate.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many small forest remnants are scattered throughout human-modified landscapes, exposing them to edge effects and chronic human-mediated disturbances that lead to reduced biomass (Chaplin-Kramer et al, 2015) and proliferation of ruderal plant species (Tabarelli et al, 2012). Ruderal plant species are more resilient to disturbances typical of small degraded forest remnants and grow rapidly when light is not a limiting factor -as in forest gaps, edges, or disturbed sectors (Tabarelli and Lopes, 2008;Schnitzer and Carson, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fire, wind and desiccation can penetrate up to kilometres into the forest151920, altering microclimate within 100–300 m of the forest edge13212223. Field studies have estimated relative carbon losses in forest edges ( e ) averaging 11% (ref.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%