Comparison of Carbon Sequestration Ability and Effect of Elevation in Fenced Wetland Plant Communities of the Xilin River Floodplains: A Model Case Study

Files

Access status: Embargo until 2050-01-01 , rra2777.pdf (1.66 MB)

Publication date

2014

Authors

Liu, Y.
Wang, L.
Liu, H.
Wang, W.
Liang, C.
Yang, J.
Verhoeven, J. t. a.ISNI 0000000116121315

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Floodplain habitats of the Xilin River in Inner Mongolia, China, were overgrazed by sheep and cattle until fencing of the floodplains was implemented in 2000. Carbon cycling of three plant communities of differing floodplain elevation after fencing showed that biomass in low-elevation wetlands increased fastest until reaching its maximum at 20 years in the future, while a slower increase in biomass existed in high-elevation and ‘hummock’ wetlands.Modelling and field experiments revealed differences between the three plant communities that were primarily attributed to different elevation levels and inundation periods. This study also determined the carbon sequestration capacity of the three floodplain wetland types (0.18 kg C m2 year1 in low-elevation wetlands, 0.09 kg C m2 year1 in high-elevation wetlands, and 0.05 kg C m2 year1 in hummock wetlands).

Keywords

Xilin River, floodplain grazing, wetland plant communities, carbon sequestration, elevation

Citation

Liu, Y, Wang, L, Liu, H, Wang, W, Liang, C, Yang, J & Verhoeven, J T A 2014, 'Comparison of Carbon Sequestration Ability and Effect of Elevation in Fenced Wetland Plant Communities of the Xilin River Floodplains: A Model Case Study', River Research and Applications, vol. 31, no. 7, pp. 858-866. https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.2777