Abstract

Global carbon cycles are impacted by human activity primarily via fossil fuel combustion and forest carbon budget alterations. In this study, the temporal dynamics and spatial distribution of forest biomass carbon (FBC) stock and density in China were analyzed to assess the large‐scale effects of humans on FBC. The results indicated that from 1977 to 2013, the FBC stock increased by 62.9%, from 4,335 to 7,064 Tg C, owing to human‐driven forestation and ecological restoration programs. Because of intensive human impacts, 44.2%–54.6% of the FBC stock was concentrated in four provinces (Heilongjiang, Yunnan, Inner Mongolia, and Sichuan) and the FBC density increased from the densely populated southeastern provinces to the sparsely populated northeastern and western provinces. On a spatial scale, the FBC density was significantly negatively related to population density, and the degree of the dependence of the FBC density on population density has been declining since 1998. This improvement in human–forest relations is related to economic development and programs in China that have promoted forestation and reduced deforestation. These results suggest that human impacts, including forestation, deforestation, population density, and economic development, have played significant roles in determining the temporal and spatial variations of FBC in the anthropogenic era. Moreover, our findings have implications for forest management and improvement of the forest carbon sink in China.

Highlights

  • Forests cover about 30% of the earth’s terrestrial land surface and store approximately 33%–46% of the terrestrial organic carbon (Bonan, 2008; Canadell & Raupach, 2008; FAO, 2010)

  • The forest area and Forest biomass carbon (FBC) stock have significantly increased by 34.0% and 62.9% (Data S1; Figure 1), respectively, and the FBC density increased by 7.7 Mg C/ha during the study periods

  • We found that on a spatial scale, the FBC density was significantly negatively correlated with the population density for each forest inventory period in China (p < .001)

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Summary

Introduction

Forests cover about 30% of the earth’s terrestrial land surface and store approximately 33%–46% of the terrestrial organic carbon (Bonan, 2008; Canadell & Raupach, 2008; FAO, 2010). Because of their important role in the conservation of carbon storage and their potential for absorbing CO2 from the atmosphere (Vilén, 2015), forests play important roles in mitigation of global climate change (Bonan, 2008; IPCC, 2014). The most recent spatial distribution of FBC in China has not been reported

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