J. Drewer, R. S. Tarigan, Lindsay F. Banin, Stella White, Elizabeth Raine, S. Luke, E. C. Turner, Ute Skiba, Nicholas J. Cowan, Jassica Prajna Dewi, A. D. Advento, A. A. K. Aryawan, J. Caliman, Pujianto
{"title":"Restoring understory and riparian areas in oil palm plantations does not increase greenhouse gas fluxes","authors":"J. Drewer, R. S. Tarigan, Lindsay F. Banin, Stella White, Elizabeth Raine, S. Luke, E. C. Turner, Ute Skiba, Nicholas J. Cowan, Jassica Prajna Dewi, A. D. Advento, A. A. K. Aryawan, J. Caliman, Pujianto","doi":"10.3389/ffgc.2024.1324475","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Oil palm (OP) plantations have replaced large areas of forest in the tropical landscape of Southeast Asia and are major emitters of greenhouse gases (GHGs). To move towards more environmentally friendly plantation management, a hopeful approach is to implement strategies to increase vegetation complexity. These options include relaxed management of understory vegetation to increase complexity in productive plantations, passive restoration of forest areas around rivers by leaving mature oil palm during replanting, and active forest restoration along river margins with planting of forest trees. These practices have the potential to deliver a range of benefits such as soil protection, reduced erosion and sedimentation in rivers, pest control and support for biodiversity, but little is known about their impact on greenhouse gas fluxes. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of improved understory growth management and the use of riparian forestry on GHG fluxes in OP plantations, making use of two long-term experiments (the Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function in Tropical Agriculture Understory Vegetation (BEFTA UV) Project; the Riparian Ecosystem Restoration in Tropical Agriculture (RERTA) Project) in Riau Province, Sumatra, Indonesia. We measured nitrous oxide (N2O), methane (CH4) and ecosystem respiration (CO2) from mature OP sites with different levels of understory vegetation and different riparian buffer restoration treatments using the static chamber method. We used linear mixed effects models to test for treatment effects, whilst accounting for soil moisture and experimental design factors (time and space). The understory vegetation treatments (normal, reduced and enhanced complexity of understory) had no effect on N2O and CH4 flux. Regarding differences in ecosystem respiration, effects attributable to the understory vegetation treatments were not strong. For the riparian restoration treatments, the fixed effects variables in the models explained little variation in the fluxes of all GHGs. Therefore, given the proven benefits of more complex understory vegetation for supporting biodiversity and healthy ecosystem functioning, plus the potential for restored riparian buffers to support biodiversity and services and to reduce GHG emissions over time, our findings reinforce the concept that these features bring environmental benefits in OP landscapes, with no measurable effects on GHG emissions.","PeriodicalId":507254,"journal":{"name":"Frontiers in Forests and Global Change","volume":"12 9","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Frontiers in Forests and Global Change","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2024.1324475","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Oil palm (OP) plantations have replaced large areas of forest in the tropical landscape of Southeast Asia and are major emitters of greenhouse gases (GHGs). To move towards more environmentally friendly plantation management, a hopeful approach is to implement strategies to increase vegetation complexity. These options include relaxed management of understory vegetation to increase complexity in productive plantations, passive restoration of forest areas around rivers by leaving mature oil palm during replanting, and active forest restoration along river margins with planting of forest trees. These practices have the potential to deliver a range of benefits such as soil protection, reduced erosion and sedimentation in rivers, pest control and support for biodiversity, but little is known about their impact on greenhouse gas fluxes. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of improved understory growth management and the use of riparian forestry on GHG fluxes in OP plantations, making use of two long-term experiments (the Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function in Tropical Agriculture Understory Vegetation (BEFTA UV) Project; the Riparian Ecosystem Restoration in Tropical Agriculture (RERTA) Project) in Riau Province, Sumatra, Indonesia. We measured nitrous oxide (N2O), methane (CH4) and ecosystem respiration (CO2) from mature OP sites with different levels of understory vegetation and different riparian buffer restoration treatments using the static chamber method. We used linear mixed effects models to test for treatment effects, whilst accounting for soil moisture and experimental design factors (time and space). The understory vegetation treatments (normal, reduced and enhanced complexity of understory) had no effect on N2O and CH4 flux. Regarding differences in ecosystem respiration, effects attributable to the understory vegetation treatments were not strong. For the riparian restoration treatments, the fixed effects variables in the models explained little variation in the fluxes of all GHGs. Therefore, given the proven benefits of more complex understory vegetation for supporting biodiversity and healthy ecosystem functioning, plus the potential for restored riparian buffers to support biodiversity and services and to reduce GHG emissions over time, our findings reinforce the concept that these features bring environmental benefits in OP landscapes, with no measurable effects on GHG emissions.
油棕种植园取代了东南亚热带地区的大片森林,是温室气体(GHG)的主要排放源。为了实现更环保的种植园管理,一种有希望的方法是实施增加植被复杂性的战略。这些方案包括放宽对林下植被的管理,以增加高产种植园的植被复杂性;在重新种植过程中保留成熟的油棕榈,从而被动地恢复河流周围的森林区域;以及通过种植林木积极恢复河流边缘的森林。这些做法有可能带来一系列好处,如保护土壤、减少河流侵蚀和沉积、控制虫害和支持生物多样性,但人们对其对温室气体通量的影响知之甚少。本研究旨在利用印度尼西亚苏门答腊岛廖内省的两个长期实验(热带农业下层植被生物多样性和生态系统功能(BEFTA UV)项目;热带农业河岸生态系统恢复(RERTA)项目),评估改善下层植被生长管理和使用河岸林业对 OP 人工林温室气体通量的影响。我们采用静态室法测量了不同林下植被水平和不同河岸缓冲区恢复处理的成熟 OP 地点的氧化亚氮(N2O)、甲烷(CH4)和生态系统呼吸作用(CO2)。我们使用线性混合效应模型来检验处理效应,同时考虑土壤湿度和实验设计因素(时间和空间)。林下植被处理(林下复杂度正常、降低和提高)对 N2O 和 CH4 通量没有影响。关于生态系统呼吸作用的差异,林下植被处理的影响不大。对于河岸植被恢复处理,模型中的固定效应变量对所有温室气体通量的影响很小。因此,鉴于更复杂的林下植被对支持生物多样性和健康生态系统功能的益处已得到证实,再加上恢复后的河岸缓冲区有可能支持生物多样性和服务,并随着时间的推移减少温室气体排放,我们的研究结果强化了这一概念,即这些特征在 OP 景观中带来了环境效益,但对温室气体排放没有可测量的影响。