1 / 22

Old-Growth Carbon Sequestration in the Sylvania Wilderness Ottawa National Forest, U.P. Michigan

Old-Growth Carbon Sequestration in the Sylvania Wilderness Ottawa National Forest, U.P. Michigan. Ankur Desai Penn State, Meteorology January 2002. Proposal Title:. Quantifying carbon sequestration potential of mid and late successional forests in the upper midwest.

wyatt-leon
Download Presentation

Old-Growth Carbon Sequestration in the Sylvania Wilderness Ottawa National Forest, U.P. Michigan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Old-Growth Carbon Sequestration in the Sylvania Wilderness Ottawa National Forest, U.P. Michigan Ankur Desai Penn State, Meteorology January 2002

  2. Proposal Title: Quantifying carbon sequestration potential of mid and late successional forests in the upper midwest View to the south from flux tower Funding agency: Department of Energy, Terrestial Carbon Processes PI: Eileen Carey (University of Minnesota – Forest Resources) Co-PIs: Ken Davis (Penn State - Meteorology) Paul Bolstad (University of Minnesota – Forest Resources) Margaret Davis (University of Minesota – Ecology, Evolution, Behavior)

  3. With additional technical support from: Bruce Cook – University of Minnesota, Forest Resources Ankur Desai – Penn State, Meteorology Bob Evans – Ottawa National Forest, Watersmeet, MI Art Johnston – Chequamegon National Forest, Park Falls, WI U.S. Forest Service, North Central Experiment Station: Jud Isebrands, Ron Teclaw, Aaron Berger View to the northeast from flux tower Helen Lake

  4. Location Ottawa National Forest – Upper Peninsula Michigan To: Willow Creek, Lost Creek, WLEF

  5. Location Sylvania Wilderness (tower just outside of wilderness area) • 8,500 ha (18,000 acres) • 35 named lakes • Mostly flat topography • 6 km e. of Watersmeet, MI • Hemlock, maple, basswood dominant stands (3-30 ha) • 0.5% turnover rate • 187 year average canopy lifetime for Hemlocks • One of two remaining large old-growth sites in upper Great Lakes region • Numerous studies of area (M. Davis, L. Frelich, etc…), 3000 year pollen record

  6. Location Near Helen Lake • Site has some lakes to north and east, fewer to west and south • Maple dominant stands right by tower, hemlock dominant within radius, yellow birch • Typical canopy DBH 40-70 cm, height 25-30 m • Mostly flat topography • In Lake Superior watershed, occasional lake effect snow • Close to campground • No Hodags have been spotted

  7. Why study old-growth forest fluxes? • Assumed to be insignificant sink, possibly source of CO2, largely based on simple conceptual models • Very few actual measurements of NEE in old-growth • Existing old-growth flux sites suggest old-growth may actually be strong carbon sinks. 100-yr old boreal-northern hardwood site in Maine had 2.1 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 NEE in 1996 (Hollinger et al., 1999). 450-yr Douglas fir site in Oregon had 2.3 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 in 1998 (Chen, 1999). On the other hand, NEE in 90-yr old Black spruce only 0.1 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 (Goulden et al., 1997). • We need a way to infer change in NEE over time as younger forests age

  8. Why study Sylvania wilderness? • Only one of two remaining old-growth sites in upper Great Lakes regions. Can help predict future course of NEE as post-logging forests of the Great Lakes region mature. Sylvania has changed little over 1000 years. • Close to ChEAS sites: Willow Creek, Lost Creek, WLEF. Can compare NEE and component fluxes among similar sites along a succesional gradient. Helen Lake?

  9. Principal Objectives of study • Characterize NEE of an undisturbed old-growth forest • Quantify the relative response of old-growth versus regrowing forests to climate variability and climate change • Determine to what degree component carbon fluxes differ between early and late successional stands • Characterize how physiological processes change as function of tree or stand age Hypotheses • Sylvania old-growth is a carbon sink • The carbon sink is smaller than younger forests but not insignificant • Overall respiration is greater than younger forests, though not necessarily due to increased stem respiration (maybe related to water limitations) • More NPP is allocated belowground as trees slow in growth

  10. Primary methods Stem / Leaf respiration Micrometeorology Sapflux CO2/H2O Eddy fluxes CO2 profile 37m tower Soil/stump respiration Soil temp/moisture

  11. Spring-Summer 2001 Building the tower Preliminary site investigation Measuring fluxes in the lab Working on Willow Creek Tower safety training

  12. Summer-Fall 2001 Inside the shed Look out below! The control shed and storage area Endless fieldwork… Another day, another climb…

  13. Measurements • CO2 and H2O 10Hz Fluxes at 36 m using Licor 6262 and Campbell CSAT-3 Sonic • CO2 mixing ratio profile (.6, 1.8, 3, 7.6, 13.7, 21.3, 36 m) using Licor 6252 • H2O mixing ratio profile (2, 21, 36 m) • Air temperature profile (.6, 2, 7.6, 12, 18, 21, 24, 30, 36 m) • Wind speed (8 and 36 m) • Above canopy net radiation and direct PAR (36 m), ground-level PAR (1 m) • Leaf wetness (36 m) • Soil temperature and moisture profile (surface, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 cm) • Soil heat flux (7.5 cm) • Precipitation (tipping-bucket), rain and snow (2 locations: open and shaded) • Tree sap flux at 48 trees, north and south side, Granier-type probe • Soil, stem and stump respiration on > 150 trees using Licor 6400 and 6200 • Leaf area index measurement with LAI-2000 • Canopy characterization in 40,000 m2 area around tower Lost Creek Shed

  14. Preliminary Results: Micrometeorology (9/17/01-10/5/01) Temp Dewpoint Pressure Wind spd Wind dir

  15. Preliminary Results: Micrometeorology 2 (9/17/01-10/5/01) PAR H2O Rainfall Soil H2O

  16. Preliminary Results: H2O, Temp, Soil Fluxes (9/17/01-10/5/01) Sensible Latent Soil Net Rad

  17. Preliminary Results: CO2 Fluxes (9/17/01-10/5/01) CO2 Storage NEE u*

  18. Preliminary Results: CO2 Profile (9/17/01-10/5/01)

  19. Preliminary Results: Sap Fluxes (Sept. and Oct. 2001) • Ensemble average daily sap flow for three tree species in cm / hour (just direct flow, not volume or leaf area flow) Yellow Birch Hemlock Sugar Maple • South side of tree is light gray/dotted, north is dark gray/solid lines

  20. Future Plans and Issues • Continue year-round flux measurement. Fix up bugs, calibration, errors • Simultaneous component (soil and stem) flux measurements at Willow Creek and Helen Lake (and Lost Creek, too) • Possibly expand sap flux measurements • Examine effect of lake on fluxes (look at fluxes based on wind direction) • Compare micrometeorology between Willow Creek and Helen Lake (effect of different watershed, lake effect snow, etc…) • Expand area of canopy characterization • Increase leaf area index measurements • Obtain and analyze aerial and remote sensing products (ASTER/MODIS?) • Compare fluxes against roving flux tower? • Compare fluxes against WLEF, other old-growth towers, other Ameriflux sites?

  21. Conclusion The Sylvania Wilderness/Helen Lake old-growth flux experiment will add knowledge about NEE uptake as forests age, and allow for an additional point of flux comparison among ChEAS and Ameriflux sites.

More Related