6.1 How agarwood sequesters carbon: biomass, soil, roots, deadwood

Here’s a comprehensive, course-ready module for your Sustainable Agarwood Plantation Management & Carbon Farming Course, training manuals, and Oud Academia / CI-ASASE programs, covering carbon sequestration in agarwood plantations.


Carbon Sequestration in Agarwood (Aquilaria spp.)

Biomass, Soil, Roots, and Deadwood Contributions


1. Introduction

Agarwood plantations are high-value timber and resin crops that also serve as carbon sinks. Carbon sequestration occurs through:

  1. Aboveground biomass (trunks, branches, leaves)
  2. Belowground biomass (roots)
  3. Soil organic carbon (SOC)
  4. Deadwood / litter (fallen branches, pruned material, leaves)

Integrating resin production with carbon farming supports ESG goals, carbon credits, and sustainable agroforestry practices.


2. Aboveground Biomass (Trunks, Branches, Leaves)

  • Primary carbon pool
  • Growth rate influenced by:
    • Tree age
    • Fertility and irrigation management
    • Spacing and canopy management
  • Resin contributes indirectly:
    • Heavier resin density increases wood mass
    • Enhances long-term carbon storage in heartwood

Estimates:

  • Mature Aquilaria tree (~10–15 yrs) stores ~50–150 kg C per tree in aboveground biomass depending on species and resin content

3. Belowground Biomass (Roots)

  • Roots account for 10–30% of total biomass
  • Carbon stored in roots contributes to:
    • Soil stabilization
    • Organic matter input via root turnover
    • Symbiotic associations with mycorrhizal fungi, enhancing soil carbon
  • Deep-rooted trees improve long-term carbon retention in subsoil layers

4. Soil Carbon Sequestration

  • Soil organic carbon (SOC) increases via:
    • Leaf litter
    • Pruned branches and mulch
    • Root exudates
  • Management practices enhancing SOC:
    • Organic amendments (compost, vermicast)
    • Mulching with pruning residues
    • Avoiding soil compaction and erosion
  • SOC contributes long-term carbon storage, often exceeding aboveground biomass in older plantations

5. Deadwood and Litter

  • Fallen branches, leaves, and pruned material form detritus layer
  • Slowly decomposes → adds to SOC and microbial biomass
  • Mulched deadwood → accelerates carbon cycling and soil fertility
  • Provides habitat for beneficial fungi and microbes → supports resin formation and soil health

6. Resin Contribution to Carbon

  • Resin itself contains carbon-rich compounds
  • Induced resin accumulation increases heartwood density → higher carbon storage per unit volume
  • High-resin trees sequester more carbon than non-resin-producing trees

7. Factors Affecting Carbon Sequestration

FactorImpact
Tree age & sizeOlder, taller trees = higher biomass & carbon storage
Fertility & irrigationHealthy, well-fertilized trees grow faster → more biomass
Agroforestry & intercroppingNitrogen-fixing species improve soil fertility → higher SOC
Pruning & mulchingReturns carbon to soil; increases microbial activity
Resin inductionDenser heartwood → more carbon per tree

8. Integration with Carbon Farming & ESG

  • Plantation design → spacing, density, and age structure optimize carbon storage
  • Organic management → enhances soil carbon and reduces GHG emissions
  • Resin induction protocols → add carbon value to high-density wood
  • Record-keeping → biomass, resin yield, soil carbon → supports carbon credits and ESG reporting

9. Practical Carbon Estimation (Illustrative)

Tree AgeAboveground C (kg/tree)Belowground C (kg/tree)Soil C Contribution (kg/tree)Total C (kg/tree)
5 years30–5010–1515–2055–85
10 years50–10015–3025–4090–170
15 years100–15030–4540–60170–255

Actual values depend on species, soil type, fertility, resin content, and plantation management.


10. Key Takeaways

  • Agarwood plantations are multi-dimensional carbon sinks: biomass, roots, resin, and soil
  • Resin-rich trees store more carbon than low-resin trees
  • Organic management, mulching, pruning, and agroforestry practices enhance both yield and carbon sequestration
  • Proper monitoring and documentation support carbon credits, ESG reporting, and sustainable investment

Optional Next Deliverables

  • 🌱 Carbon sequestration calculation SOP for agarwood plantations
  • 📊 Illustrative lifecycle chart: tree growth → resin induction → carbon storage
  • 🧾 Monitoring logbook template: biomass, soil, resin, deadwood
  • 📘 Farmer-friendly infographic: carbon sequestration pathways in agarwood

I can prepare a visual carbon sequestration infographic + logbook template next, showing biomass, roots, soil, and resin contributions, tailored for Oud Academia / CI-ASASE plantations.

Do you want me to create that?