Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstracts
Organic carbon stocks in New Zealand's terrestrial ecosystems
K. R. Tate,1 D. J. Giltrap,2 J. J.
Claydon,3 P. F. Newsome,1 I. A. E. Atkinson,4
M. D. Taylor,3 R. Lee3
The organic carbon in New Zealand's vegetation and soils has been estimated for
1992 from updated national databases of vegetative cover and soil carbon. These
databases were augmented by inclusion of vegetation and soils information for
Stewart Island, and addition of carbon estimates for upland and high-country
soils of South Island. Plant biomass estimates from literature were combined
with the Vegetative Cover Map of New Zealand to give an estimate of 2420 Mt
carbon for vegetation carbon above and below ground, including litter and
humus. More than 80% of this carbon occurs in indigenous forested ecosystems on
less than 26% of the land area, with only about 5% in planted forests.
Soil organic carbon estimates for two depth ranges (0-0.25 m, 0-1 m)
were derived from the N.Z. Land Resource Inventory, the Soil Map of Stewart
Island, and the National Soils Database. Totals were 2500 +/- 77 Mt and 4260
+/- 190 Mt C respectively. Yellow-brown earths made the largest contribution,
with 727 Mt C in North Island and 489 Mt C in South Island, to 1 m depth.
Nationally this soil group also contributed most to the error variance for soil
carbon.
A 1:1 relationship (R, 0.68) over a wide range of soil C contents for soils
sampled recently and 30-50 years ago under pasture suggested that under the
same land use, uncertainties introduced by the use of historical soil data
would not be large.
Keywords: carbon; inventory; soils; vegetation; forests; New Zealand.
(c) Journal of The Royal Society of New Zealand,
Volume 27, Number 3, September 1997, pp 315-335
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (2107K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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