Carbon Stocks on Forest Stewardship Program and Adjacent Lands
Gopher tortoise on a sandy road. Figure 5 from publication FOR336/FR40: The Value of Private Non-Industrial Forestland for Wildlife Species Conservation. Credit: UF/IFAS.
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Keywords

FR384

How to Cite

Timilsina, Nilesh, Francisco J. Escobedo, Alison E. Adams, and Damian C. Adams. 2017. “Carbon Stocks on Forest Stewardship Program and Adjacent Lands: FOR316/FR384, Rev. 3/2017”. EDIS 2017 (3). Gainesville, FL:7. https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-fr384-2017.

Abstract

Nonindustrial private forestlands in Florida provide many environmental benefits, or ecosystem services. Ecosystem services are benefits from nature that are directly enjoyed, consumed, or used by humans, such as water quality improvement or protection, recreation, biodiversity, and even timber. Another benefit from forests that is gaining interest is their ability to store carbon through the photosynthetic capture of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, in tree, plant, and soil biomass. The carbon dioxide that is stored over the life of a forest, called carbon stocks, is not only important for mitigating greenhouse gas contributions to climate change, but it can also be valued in several markets and incorporated into environmental policy instruments. This 5-page fact sheet was written by Nilesh Timilsina, Francisco J. Escobedo, Alison E. Adams, and Damian C. Adams and published by the UF Department of School of Forest Resources and Conservation April 2017.­

 Original publication date October 2013; revised March
2017. Archived 9/18/2020.

https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-fr384-2017
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license.