Abstract

Forests play an important role in mitigating many of the negative effects of climate change. One of the ways trees mitigate impacts of climate change is by absorbing carbon dioxide and storing carbon in their wood, leaves, roots, and soil. Field assessments are used to quantify the carbon storage across different forested landscapes. The number of trees, their size, and total area inform estimates of how much carbon they store. Urban forested natural areas often have greater tree density compared to trees planted in designed cityscapes suggesting that natural area forests could be an important carbon stock for cities. We report a carbon budget for urban forested natural area using field-collected data across an entire city and model carbon stock and annual stock change in multiple forest pools. We find that natural area forests in New York City store a mean of 263.04 (95% CI 256.61, 270.40) Mg C ha-1 and we estimate that 1.86 Tg C (95% CI 1.60, 2.13 Tg C) is stored in the city’s forested natural areas. We provide an upper estimate that these forests sequester carbon at a mean rate of 7.42 (95% CI 7.13, 7.71) Mg C ha-1 y-1 totaling 0.044 Tg (95% CI 0.028, 0.055) of carbon annually, with the majority being stored in trees and soil. Urban forested natural areas store carbon at similar and in some cases higher rates compared to rural forests. Native oak-dominated forests with large mature trees store the most carbon. When compared to previous estimates of urban-canopy carbon storage, we find that trees in natural area forests in New York City account for the majority of carbon stored despite being a minority of the tree canopy. Our results show that urban forested natural areas play an important role in localized, natural climate solutions and should be at the center of urban greening policies looking to mitigate the climate footprint of cities.

Highlights

  • Cities are net sources of carbon emissions (Rosenzweig et al 2010) and human development and urbanization has been linked to loss in tree cover globally (Crowther et al 2015)

  • We find that natural area forests in New York City store a mean of 263.04 Mg C ha− 1 and we estimate that 1.86 Tg C is stored in the city’s forested natural areas

  • We estimate that natural area forests in NYC store 1.84 Tg C (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Cities are net sources of carbon emissions (Rosenzweig et al 2010) and human development and urbanization has been linked to loss in tree cover globally (Crowther et al 2015). Urban tree cover is found to be associated with multiple positive outcomes that can provide benefits to city life, including reducing urban heat islands (Melaas et al 2016), stormwater capture (Berland et al 2017) and in the US urban trees are estimated to store 708 Tg of carbon (C) and sequester 25 Tg C y− 1 (Nowak and Crane 2002). These estimates depend on accurate characterization of tree species, size, density, and growing conditions associated with urban tree canopies. Basal area and biomass vary markedly among tree canopy types in cities, especially between designed and natural area ecosystems (Pregitzer et al 2019b)

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