Abstract
Psidium guajava Linnaeus., popularly known as ‘Apple of Tropics’ is one of the major fruit crops undertaken on the bouldery riverbed lands of North-Western Himalayan region. Different predictive models were fitted to establish a functional relationship between biomass and collar diameter (CD) of the tree. Out of seven different models attempted viz, Monomolecular, Logistic, Gompetz, Allometric, Rechards, Chapman and Linear, Allometric model (Y = a Xb where Y = total biomass, X = collar diameter, a and b = parameter estimates) fulfills the validation criteria to the best possible extent and is considered as best performing. Allometric model has been fitted to find the relationship between biomass of different tree components and collar diameter. All the equations indicated high correlation between biomass and collar diameter and the R2 values for the fitted functions varied from 0.89 to 0.99. The calculated t-statistic values for all the components found to be non-significant (p > 0.05) which clearly reveals the validity and reliability of the model. The developed allometric models were used to estimate the biomass and carbon stocks of P. guajava plantations of the study site. The estimated total biomass varied from 1.43 Mg ha−1 in 4 year to 40.54 Mg ha−1 in 14 year old plantation. Mitigated carbon varied from 0.26 in 4 year to 7.75 Mg ha−1 in 14 year of plantation. The total biomass carbon stocks varied from 0.48 Mg ha−1 (4 year) to 13.66 Mg ha−1 (14 year) guava plantation.
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