50-7 Forecasting Carbon Storage of Eastern Forests: Can American Chestnut Restoration Improve Storage Potential in an Uncertain Future?.

See more from this Division: Agriculture and Natural Resources Science for Climate Variability and Change: Transformational Advancements in Research, Education and Extension
See more from this Session: Scientific Inputs to Managing Natural Resources and the Environment Under a Changing Climate: Observations to Models to Decisions
Monday, October 22, 2012: 4:00 PM
Duke Energy Convention Center, Junior Ballroom C, Level 3
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Arjanus De Bruijn1, Douglass F. Jacobs1, Harmony Dalgleish1, Nathaniel F. Lichti1, Brian Sturtevant2 and Eric Gustafson3, (1)Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
(2)Northern Research Station, USDA-ARS Forest Service, Rhinelander, WI
(3)USDA-ARS Forest Service, Rhinelander, WI
The wide scale reduction of American chestnut (Castanea dentata) trees due to the exotic pathogen chestnut blight (Cryphonectria parasitica) in the Appalachians is one among many examples of human-induced changes to forest tree species composition that affect both ecological values and forest carbon (C) storage. We coupled an established, one-dimensional tree biophysical model (PnET) with a spatially explicit species distribution model (LANDIS) to analyze C, N and soil water dynamics in association with several management options to reintroduce a blight-resistant American chestnut. By doing so, we expect to increase critical knowledge on interactions between species composition, biogeochemistry of forest ecosystems, and climate change.
See more from this Division: Agriculture and Natural Resources Science for Climate Variability and Change: Transformational Advancements in Research, Education and Extension
See more from this Session: Scientific Inputs to Managing Natural Resources and the Environment Under a Changing Climate: Observations to Models to Decisions