Deciduous afforestation as a natural climate solution: impacts on biomass and carbon sequestration in boreal forests of Canada

3 views
Skip to first unread message

Geoengineering News

unread,
Jan 8, 2026, 6:04:44 PM (yesterday) Jan 8
to CarbonDiox...@googlegroups.com
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13021-025-00385-2

Authors: Francois du Toit, Nicholas C. Coops, Christopher Mulverhill & Aoife Toomey 

Published: 03 January 2026

Abstract
Background
Rising temperatures and altered precipitation patterns are expected to have profound impacts on the composition and condition of boreal forests. As a result there are growing needs for climate adaptation strategies in boreal forest management; one potential solution to achieve these goals is the utilization of nature-based climate-informed adaption solutions including afforestation using deciduous species which can help offset carbon emissions and sequester carbon at an increased rate. Deciduous afforestation has the potential to allow mangers to adapt fire-risk, while increasing carbon storage. Here, we investigated the impact of deciduous compared to coniferous afforestation on biomass accumulation in the Canadian boreal using a process-based model (3-PG). 3-PG utilises physiological principals to predict the growth of individual species across a variety of climate scenarios. This approach is valuable for projecting forest growth under changing climate, as it can account for plant responses to environmental factors which may not be captured by empirical models based on historical data. We simulated forest growth under three future climate scenarios to 2080, and compared the aboveground biomass (AGB, tons of Dry Matter per hectare; tDM ha−1) accumulated to baseline estimates using locally adapted coniferous species. In addition, we investigated the modelled effects of converting from conifer to deciduous species on stand level soil water and vapor pressure deficit responses to climate.

Results
We found that deciduous simulations sequester more carbon under all climate scenarios, with the greatest difference occurring in the warmest scenario (171 tDM ha−1 for coniferous species compared to 347.1 tDM ha−1 for deciduous species). Coniferous species were generally more water stressed than deciduous species; conifers were generally 65.6% more stressed compared to deciduous species in August under the warmest climate scenario, while northern sites were less stressed than southern sites.

Conclusions
Simulations such as these highlight the importance of modelling and consideration of different planting scenarios in decision-making to ensure successful resource allocation. They also demonstrate the potential of nature-based adaptation solutions projects, and the role deciduous afforestation can play in provision of habitat, modifying wildfire risk and northern boreal biomass and timber supply.

Source: Springer Nature Link 
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages