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Massive carbon sink in Victoria

16 Jun, 2009 07:59 AM
The world's most carbon-dense forests are not in the tropics, but in a protected mountain catchment that supplies Melbourne's drinking water, new research shows.

A five-year study by the Australian National University of more than 130 forest sites around the world found these wet mountain ash forests just over an hour's drive from the Melbourne Cricket Ground store twice the amount of carbon as a tropical rainforest.

The cool, moist temperate forests of the O'Shannassy catchment, which includes the headwaters of the Yarra River, store just under 2000 tonnes of carbon a hectare in their giant 300-year-old mountain ash eucalypts, lush understorey vegetation such as tree ferns, and in dead wood on the forest floor. But as the trees age, the figure rises, with trees more than 250 years old boosting the carbon sink capacity to just over 2800t a hectare.

The unexpected findings, published online today in a National Academy of Sciences journal in the United States, have critical implications for climate policy in the lead-up to the United Nations climate conference to be held in Copenhagen later this year.

The research paper, by ANU ecologists Heather Keith, Professor Brendan Mackey and Professor David Lindenmayer, over-turns conventional theories on the role of forests in carbon accounting.

Professor Mackey said, ''It identifies a gap in climate change policy that Australia needs to address.

''There has been a lot of talk about the need to address tropical deforestation in developing countries, but these results show we must start by recognising the carbon benefits to be gained from protecting our native forests,'' he said.

More on the research in today's Canberra Times

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Not only a carbon sink but an active contributor to rain. Those who have read Mollison's Permaculture Manual will have read his analysis of the active part trees play in contributing to rainfall. To the extent that on a clear day in some dense rainforests a fine mist of moisture falls constantly. Research many years ago in WA showed a large tree sucked up moisture and exhaled large amounts daily, similar research in the Amazon showed the same effect. Mollison stated "water evaporation from leaves is 25.6% of the whole, water returned to the air by transpiration (trees breathing water) 48%, ground water run off 25.9% whilin dnese forsest evaporation is zero. Prince Charles, writing in a recent Reader Digest, repeats Mollisons information. A recent TV program on Indian history not only shows the movement of a populaton south into the Indian Sub continent but also the desertification of the country by tree felling that forced such a move, a point ignored by the program producers. Jaycie
Posted by Jaycie, 16/06/2009 1:37:21 PM
Economic growth and stewardship are exclusive of one another. Arithmetic, Population and Energy http://www.albartlett.org/present ations/arithmetic_populatio n_energy_video1.html
Posted by Ausearth, 16/06/2009 1:18:20 PM
Climate change will see forests at this latitude subjected to ongoing fire damage that they are unlikely to recover from. The intesity of recent bush fires are testament to this and you only have to take a drive through the the Brindabellas to realise the re generation is minimal.
Posted by Gob, 16/06/2009 12:37:32 PM
With the obesity of Melbourne's boundaries and population growth, it is quite likely these carbon sinks will be eventually swallowed up by urban sprawl - if Brumby and Madden have their way! With logging of old-growth forests, catchment areas, lack of rain and water, the most environmentally damaged and cleared State in Australia - Victoria - is being sold off to the frenzy of propery developments. If our leaders don't believe in climate change, how are we ever to survive it?
Posted by Vivienne, 16/06/2009 11:08:37 AM
All the more reason to protect our native forests as carbon banks, move jobs into plantations, and end the native forest logging debacle once and for all.
Posted by Luke, 16/06/2009 9:47:38 AM

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ECOLOGIST: Professor David Lindenmayer
ECOLOGIST: Professor David Lindenmayer

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