Scientific Publication

Quantification of the Terrestrial Phytomass and Carbon in the Mountainous Forest Ecosystem Using Remote Sensing and In-Situ Observations

Abstract

The aim of this research was to develop an understanding of how mountainous forests function in relation to forest phytomass and&#xA;carbon accumulation in the terrestrial vegetation pools which will help develop options for climate change. In this study, the forest&#xA;phytomass has been assessed in range of subtropical and temperate forest dominated by tree species of Quercus semicarpifolia Sm.&#xA;and Pinus roxburghii Sarg in Himalayan region Purola tehsil in Uttarkashi district of Uttarakhand state of India. In-situ&#xA;measurements of the phytomass were taken with clustered sampling approach on a total of 40 plots (0.1 ha each), i.e. in 10 MODIS&#xA;pixels with 4 plots laid in an individual pixel. The field measured phytomass was found in the range of 67.76 - 1,108 t ha-1.&#xA;Weighted-area phytomass was estimated at an individual MODIS (MOD13Q1, 250m) pixel where in-situ measurements varied from&#xA;207.93 t ha-1 - 1,042 t ha-1. The best fit equation of pixel phytomass values was regressed on red, infra-red and vegetation indices&#xA;(NDVI) derived from the MODIS data. The correlation between the measured phytomass and NDVI was found significant and&#xA;maximum in the month of December (R value -0.71, p < 0.01). However, such a relationship was not persistent throughout the year.&#xA;The R2 value between observed phytomass and predicted phytomass was 0.53. The predicted phytomass based on 250×250 m&#xA;MODIS data varied from 216.88 - 1,011 t ha-1. The average phytomass density in study area was 470.42 t ha-1 and carbon density&#xA;221.09 t ha-1