Journal of Tropical Biodiversity and Biotechnology
Vol 7, No 1 (2022): April

Aboveground Forest Carbon Stock in Protected Area: A Case Study of Bukit Tigapuluh National Park, Indonesia

Arief Darmawan (Department of Forestry, Lampung University, Jl. Sumantri Brojonegoro No.1, Bandar Lampung, Indonesia, 35145 )
Zulfira Warta (WWF Indonesia, Graha Simatupang Tower 2, Jakarta Indonesia, 12430)
Elis Molidena (WWF Indonesia, Graha Simatupang Tower 2, Jakarta Indonesia, 12430)
Alexandra Valla (WWF Indonesia, Graha Simatupang Tower 2, Jakarta Indonesia, 12430)
Muhammad Iqbal Firdaus (WWF Indonesia, Graha Simatupang Tower 2, Jakarta Indonesia, 12430)
Gunardi Djoko Winarno (Department of Forestry, Lampung University, Jl. Sumantri Brojonegoro No.1, Bandar Lampung, Indonesia, 35145)
Bondan Winarno (Forest Research and Development Center, Ministry of Environment and Forestry, Jln.Gunung Batu No.5 Bogor, 16119)
Teddy Rusolono (Faculty of Forestry and Environment, IPB University, Jl. Raya Dramaga Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, 16680)
Satoshi Tsuyuki (Graduate School of Agriculture and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan, 113-0032)



Article Info

Publish Date
12 Jan 2022

Abstract

The role of protected areas has been expanded into climate change mitigation, specifically on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+). A reliable and practical method for measuring, reporting and verifying carbon stock is an essential component for REDD+. This study aims to recognize the characteristic and estimate aboveground forest carbon (AGC) stock in the tropical protected tropical area using a combination of terrestrial forest inventory and spatial data. A 168 cluster plots totaling 33.6 hectares were taken proportionally based on the percentage of forest cover types (dryland primary natural forest/DPF and dryland secondary natural forest/DSF) using a traditional forest inventory method (more than 5 cm dbh). Results showed that Bukit Tigapuluh National Park secured a significant AGC stock which has been estimated to be 269.2 [247.07; 291.43] tC/ha or 35,823,639 [32,872,312; 38,774,966] tC in total, being stored in approximately 133,051 hectares of the tropical rain forest. This result was higher than other studies in non-protected areas but slightly lower than other studies within protected areas. This finding supported the argument that protected areas possess a higher figure of AGC stock than other forest management units. The high amount of forest carbon biomass in the protected areas shall be very important assets for conducting the role of conservation for REDD+. 

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Journal Info

Abbrev

jtbb

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry Biochemistry, Genetics & Molecular Biology Environmental Science Immunology & microbiology

Description

Journal of Tropical Biodiversity and Biotechnology (JTBB) is an authoritative source of information concerned with the advancement of tropical biology studies in the Southeast Asia Region. It publishes original scientific work related to a diverse range of fields in tropical biodiversity, functional ...