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Title: | Total Carbon Stock and Potential Carbon Sequestration Economic Value of Mukogodo Forest-Landscape Ecosystem in Drylands of Northern Kenya |
Authors: | Leley, Nereoh C. Langat, David K. Kisiwa, Abdalla K. Maina, Geoffry M. Muga, Meshack O. |
Keywords: | Carbon Sequestration Carbon Stock Economic Value Dryland Forest-Landscape |
Issue Date: | 22-Nov-2021 |
Publisher: | Scientific Research Publishing |
Citation: | Leley, N. C., Lan- gat, D. K., Kisiwa, A. K., Maina, G. M., & Muga, M. O. (2022). Total Carbon Stock and Potential Carbon Sequestration Economic Value of Mukogodo Forest-Landscape Eco- system in Drylands of Northern Kenya. Open Journal of Forestry, 12, 19-40. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojf.2022.121002 |
Abstract: | Carbon sequestration is one of the important ecosystem services provided by forested landscapes. Dry forests have high potential for carbon storage. How- ever, their potential to store and sequester carbon is poorly understood in Kenya. Moreover, past attempts to estimate carbon stock have ignored dryl- ands ecosystem heterogeneity. This study assessed the potential of Mukogodo dryland forest-landscape in offsetting carbon dioxide through carbon seques- tration and storage. Four carbon pools (above and below ground biomass, soil, dead wood and litter) were analyzed. A total of 51 (400 m2) sample plots were established using stratified-random sampling technique to estimate biomass across six vegetation classes in three landscape types (forest reserve, ranches and conservancies) using nested-plot design. Above ground biomass was determined using generalized multispecies model with diameter at breast height, height and wood density as variables. Below ground, soil, litter and dead wood biomass; carbon stocks and carbon dioxide equivalents (CO2eq) were estimated using secondary information. The CO2eq was multiplied by current prices of carbon trade to compute carbon sequestration value. Mean ± SE of biomass and carbon was determined across vegetation and landscape types and mean differences tested by one-way Analysis of Variance. Mean biomass and carbon was about 79.15 ± 40.22 TB ha−1 and 37.25 ± 18.89 TC ha−1 respectively. Cumulative carbon stock was estimated at 682.08 TC ha−1; forest reserve (251.57 TC ha−1) had significantly high levels of carbon stocks. |
URI: | http://197.248.75.118:8282/jspui/handle/123456789/1064 |
Appears in Collections: | Journals |
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File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Leley et al ojf_2021111915012715.pdf | 1.66 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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