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DOI: 10.4337/9781849805834.00023
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Land use, land use change and forestry

Ian Noble,Michael J. Apps,Richard A. Houghton,Daniel A. Lashof,Willy Makundi,Daniel Murdiyarso,A. Brad Murray,W.G. Sombroek,Riccardo Valentini,Masahiro Amano,Philip M. Fearnside,Jorge Luis Frangi,Peter C. Frumhoff,Donald Goldberg,Níro Higuchi,Anthony C. Janetos,Miko Kirschbaum,Rodel D. Lasco,G.J. Nabuurs,Reider Persson,William H. Schlesinger,А. Shvidenko,David L. Skole,Pete Smith,M. G. R. Cannell,Carlos C. Cerri,D. Christopher Goetze,H. H. Janzen,J. M. Kimble,Rattan Lal,Pedro Moura-Costa,Mark O’Brien,Pancho Sanchez,Tej Vir Singh,Robert J. Scholes

Land use, land-use change and forestry
Forestry
Land use
2015
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special Report on Land Use, Land-Use Change, and Forestry (SR-LULUCF) has been prepared in response to a request from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA). At its eighth session in Bonn, Germany, 2-12 Ju and technical implications of carbon sequestration strategies related to land use, land-use change, and forestry activities. The scope, structure, and outline of this Special Report was approved by the IPCC in plenary meetings during its Fourteenth Session. This Special Report examines several key questions relating to the exchange of carbon between the atmosphere and the terrestrial pool of aboveground biomass, below-ground biomass, and soils. Vegetation exchanges carbon dioxide between the atmosphere and the terrestrial biosphere through photosynthesis and plant and soil respiration. This natural exchange has been occurring for hundreds of millions of years. Humans are changing the natural rate of exchange of carbon between the atmosphere and the terrestrial biosphere through land use, land-use change, and forestry activities. The aim of the SR-LULUCF is to assist the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol by providing relevant scientific and technical information to describe how the global carbon cycle operates and what the broad-scale opportunities and implications of ARD and additional human-induced activities are, now and in the future. This Special Report also identifies questions that Parties to the Protocol may wish to consider regarding definitions and accounting rules.
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    Land use, land use change and forestry” is a paper by Ian Noble Michael J. Apps Richard A. Houghton Daniel A. Lashof Willy Makundi Daniel Murdiyarso A. Brad Murray W.G. Sombroek Riccardo Valentini Masahiro Amano Philip M. Fearnside Jorge Luis Frangi Peter C. Frumhoff Donald Goldberg Níro Higuchi Anthony C. Janetos Miko Kirschbaum Rodel D. Lasco G.J. Nabuurs Reider Persson William H. Schlesinger А. Shvidenko David L. Skole Pete Smith M. G. R. Cannell Carlos C. Cerri D. Christopher Goetze H. H. Janzen J. M. Kimble Rattan Lal Pedro Moura-Costa Mark O’Brien Pancho Sanchez Tej Vir Singh Robert J. Scholes published in 2015. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.