Science Inventory

UNCERTAINTIES IN COUNTRYWIDE FOREST BIOMASS ESTIMATES

Citation:

Peterson, C. AND D. Turner. UNCERTAINTIES IN COUNTRYWIDE FOREST BIOMASS ESTIMATES. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/A-93/011 (NTIS PB93149250).

Description:

Country-wide estimates of forest biomass are the major driver for estimating and understanding carbon pools and flux, a critical component of global change research. mportant determinants in making these estimates include the areal extend of forested lands and their associated biomass. stimates for these parameters may be derived from surface-based data, photo interpretation or satellite remote sensing, with varying degrees of uncertainty. round data are typically aggregated by forest type, stand age, productivity level, and ownership. Survey priority is usually given to regions and forest types with timber of commercial value, such that information on understory biomass and forested lands of low commercial value is either absent or of limited reliability. urthermore, information on below ground biomass, which is costly and time-consuming to collect, is not generally available. ypically, uncertainty in survey statistics increases as the level of post-stratification increases because of reduced sample size. Likewise, literature-based expansion factors also add to the uncertainty of a final estimate because of the often unknown spatial inference for those factors. stimates based on modelled processes may provide relatively limited information on uncertainty.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:04/12/2004
Record ID: 41283