A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam

Background and Objectives:In northern Vietnam, nearly 37,100 hectares of mangroves were lost from 1964-1997 due to unsustainable harvest and deforestation for the creation of shrimp aquaculture ponds. To offset these losses, efforts in the late 1990s have resulted in thousands of hectares of mangrov...

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Main Authors: Hong Tinh, Pham, Thi Hong Hanh, Nguyen, Van Thanh, Vo, Sy Tuan, Mai, Van Quang, Pham, Sharma, Sahadev, MacKenzie, Richard A.
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Published: MDPI 2020
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/36644/
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spelling my.um.eprints.366442024-08-13T08:24:29Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/36644/ A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam Hong Tinh, Pham Thi Hong Hanh, Nguyen Van Thanh, Vo Sy Tuan, Mai Van Quang, Pham Sharma, Sahadev MacKenzie, Richard A. GE Environmental Sciences Background and Objectives:In northern Vietnam, nearly 37,100 hectares of mangroves were lost from 1964-1997 due to unsustainable harvest and deforestation for the creation of shrimp aquaculture ponds. To offset these losses, efforts in the late 1990s have resulted in thousands of hectares of mangroves being restored, but few studies to date have examined how effective these efforts are at creating restored mangrove forests that function similarly to the intact mangroves they are intended to replace.Materials and Methods:We quantified and compared soil carbon (C) stocks among restored (mono and mixed species) and intact mangrove forests in the provinces of Quang Ninh, Thai Binh, Nam Dinh and Thanh Hoa in northern Vietnam. A total of 96 soil cores up to a depth of 200 cm were collected every 25 m (25, 50, 75, 100, 125, and 150 m) along 16 linear transects that were 150 m long and perpendicular to the mangrove upland interface (six cores along each transect) at Quang Ninh (four transects), Thai Binh (five), Nam Dinh (four) and Thanh Hoa (three). Five-cm-long soil samples were then collected from the 0-15 cm, 15-30 cm, 30-50 cm, 50-100 cm, and >100 cm depth intervals of each soil core.Results:The study confirmed that the soil C stock of 20-25-year-old restored mangrove forest (217.74 +/- 16.82 Mg/ha) was not significantly different from that of intact mangrove forest (300.68 +/- 51.61 Mg/ha) (p> 0.05). Soil C stocks of Quang Ninh (323.89 +/- 28.43 Mg/ha) were not significantly different from Nam Dinh (249.81 +/- 19.09 Mg/ha), but both of those were significantly larger than Thai Binh (201.42 +/- 27.65 Mg/ha) and Thanh Hoa (178.98 +/- 30.82 Mg/ha) (p< 0.05). Soil C stock differences among provinces could be due to their different geomorphological characteristics and mangrove age. Soil C stocks did not differ among mangroves that were restored with mixed mangrove species (289.75 +/- 33.28 Mg/ha),Sonneratia caseolaris(L.) Engl. (255.67 +/- 13.11 Mg/ha) orAegiceras corniculatum(L.) Blanco (278.15 +/- 43.86 Mg/ha), but soil C stocks of those mangroves were significantly greater than that ofKandelia obovataSheue, Liu & Yong (174.04 +/- 20.38 Mg/ha) (p< 0.05).Conclusion:There were significant differences in the soil C stocks of mangrove forests among species and provinces in northern Vietnam. The soil C stock of 20-25-year-old restored mangrove forest was not significantly different from that of intact mangrove forest. MDPI 2020-06 Article PeerReviewed Hong Tinh, Pham and Thi Hong Hanh, Nguyen and Van Thanh, Vo and Sy Tuan, Mai and Van Quang, Pham and Sharma, Sahadev and MacKenzie, Richard A. (2020) A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam. Forests, 11 (6). ISSN 19994907,
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic GE Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle GE Environmental Sciences
Hong Tinh, Pham
Thi Hong Hanh, Nguyen
Van Thanh, Vo
Sy Tuan, Mai
Van Quang, Pham
Sharma, Sahadev
MacKenzie, Richard A.
A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam
description Background and Objectives:In northern Vietnam, nearly 37,100 hectares of mangroves were lost from 1964-1997 due to unsustainable harvest and deforestation for the creation of shrimp aquaculture ponds. To offset these losses, efforts in the late 1990s have resulted in thousands of hectares of mangroves being restored, but few studies to date have examined how effective these efforts are at creating restored mangrove forests that function similarly to the intact mangroves they are intended to replace.Materials and Methods:We quantified and compared soil carbon (C) stocks among restored (mono and mixed species) and intact mangrove forests in the provinces of Quang Ninh, Thai Binh, Nam Dinh and Thanh Hoa in northern Vietnam. A total of 96 soil cores up to a depth of 200 cm were collected every 25 m (25, 50, 75, 100, 125, and 150 m) along 16 linear transects that were 150 m long and perpendicular to the mangrove upland interface (six cores along each transect) at Quang Ninh (four transects), Thai Binh (five), Nam Dinh (four) and Thanh Hoa (three). Five-cm-long soil samples were then collected from the 0-15 cm, 15-30 cm, 30-50 cm, 50-100 cm, and >100 cm depth intervals of each soil core.Results:The study confirmed that the soil C stock of 20-25-year-old restored mangrove forest (217.74 +/- 16.82 Mg/ha) was not significantly different from that of intact mangrove forest (300.68 +/- 51.61 Mg/ha) (p> 0.05). Soil C stocks of Quang Ninh (323.89 +/- 28.43 Mg/ha) were not significantly different from Nam Dinh (249.81 +/- 19.09 Mg/ha), but both of those were significantly larger than Thai Binh (201.42 +/- 27.65 Mg/ha) and Thanh Hoa (178.98 +/- 30.82 Mg/ha) (p< 0.05). Soil C stock differences among provinces could be due to their different geomorphological characteristics and mangrove age. Soil C stocks did not differ among mangroves that were restored with mixed mangrove species (289.75 +/- 33.28 Mg/ha),Sonneratia caseolaris(L.) Engl. (255.67 +/- 13.11 Mg/ha) orAegiceras corniculatum(L.) Blanco (278.15 +/- 43.86 Mg/ha), but soil C stocks of those mangroves were significantly greater than that ofKandelia obovataSheue, Liu & Yong (174.04 +/- 20.38 Mg/ha) (p< 0.05).Conclusion:There were significant differences in the soil C stocks of mangrove forests among species and provinces in northern Vietnam. The soil C stock of 20-25-year-old restored mangrove forest was not significantly different from that of intact mangrove forest.
format Article
author Hong Tinh, Pham
Thi Hong Hanh, Nguyen
Van Thanh, Vo
Sy Tuan, Mai
Van Quang, Pham
Sharma, Sahadev
MacKenzie, Richard A.
author_facet Hong Tinh, Pham
Thi Hong Hanh, Nguyen
Van Thanh, Vo
Sy Tuan, Mai
Van Quang, Pham
Sharma, Sahadev
MacKenzie, Richard A.
author_sort Hong Tinh, Pham
title A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam
title_short A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam
title_full A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam
title_fullStr A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in Northern Vietnam
title_sort comparison of soil carbon stocks of intact and restored mangrove forests in northern vietnam
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2020
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/36644/
_version_ 1809136910245822464