99723 Assessing Forestry Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sequestration with Comet-FarmTM.

Poster Number 456-903

See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Environmental Quality Poster

Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Phoenix Convention Center North, Exhibit Hall CDE

Matthew Stermer1, Justin Ziegler1, Mark Easter1, Amy Swan1, Keith Paustian2, Kevin D Brown1, Crystal Tourenne1, Ernest S. Marx1, Sobha Velayudan1, Adriane Huber1, Adam Chambers3 and Marci Barabski4, (1)Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO
(2)200 West Lake Street/Central Rec., Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO
(3)USDA/NRCS, Portland, OR
(4)Office of the Chief Economist, USDA, Washington, DC
Poster Presentation
  • ASA_Poster_Forestry - MJE_JZedit_MS2016.pdf (2.9 MB)
  • Abstract:
    COMET-FarmTM is an integrated web-based decision support tool developed in collaboration with and support from the NRCS and USDA to aid farmers, agricultural producers, natural resource professionals, land managers and conservationists in making land and livestock management decisions regarding greenhouse gas emissions and carbon sequestration. COMET-FarmTM provides total farm, ranch and woodlot greenhouse gas accounting, including cropland, pasture, range, agroforestry, forestry, livestock and on-farm/ranch energy use modules.  Forestry is practiced widely in the U.S., and the potential carbon sequestration co-benefits of specialized forestry practices are beginning to be recognized nationally.  With the use of COMET-FarmTM, users can input information regarding forest stands such as stand boundaries, using a geospatial interface, stand composition, structure, and silvicultural practices. COMET-FarmTM predicts the contribution of each forest stand’s current and expected future greenhouse gas balances for 50 years into the future. Users can view greenhouse gas balances broadly, such as comparing totals across stands and silvicultural options, and narrowly, such as comparing different carbon stocks (e.g., biomass, forest products) within stands. Using a comprehensive approach, users with mixed agricultural and forest lands can integrate forest practices with other land uses, such as agroforestry, cropland and livestock production, to ascertain the relative impact of their forest management practices. The tool accounts for forest growth and biomass dynamics, harvesting, and the fate of forest products. The tool is firmly grounded scientifically, using GHG inventory methods provided in, Quantifying Greenhouse Gas Fluxes in Agriculture and Forestry: Methods for Entity-Scale Inventory and methods demonstrated in the USDA Forest Service report, Methods for calculating forest ecosystem and harvested carbon with standard estimates for forest types of the United States.  To demonstrate the power of this tool, we showcase the tool’s capabilities to estimate greenhouse gas fluxes on forestland using real-world examples of forestry practices.

    See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
    See more from this Session: Environmental Quality Poster