1. Introduction
Climate change is no longer a distant threat but rather a problem that is already knocking at our door and affecting biodiversity and the human economy on a global scale [
1]. Deforestation is one of the major drivers contributing to climate change [
2]. However, developing countries often fail to reconcile development with environmental preservation, believing that this can affect their economic growth [
3].
Many people are dependent on forest resources for their subsistence [
4,
5,
6]. Wood is an important natural resource that is used for pulp, energy, and sawmill products [
7,
8,
9]. The advisability of removing wood from the Amazonian forest and the effectiveness of controls on logging have been questioned in recent decades due to illegal logging and deforestation [
10,
11,
12,
13]. This situation has caused global concern and stimulated the creation of regulatory guidelines, monitoring, controls, and new approaches to forest resource management [
14,
15,
16].
One method of limiting damage from logging is low-impact forest management (LIM), a process that aims to reduce costs and waste [
14,
17,
18] and minimize impacts on the forest [
19,
20], increase the growth rates of trees (and consequently the supply of wood [
14,
19,
21]), and enhance socio-economic and environmental development [
15,
22,
23]. However, there are challenges to be overcome in maintaining species biodiversity while extracting timber [
24].
Brazil’s legislation establishes permissions, obligations, and restrictions for the removal of wood from the forest, which can be done under approved “sustainable forest-management plans” (PMFSes) [
25,
26]. For this, the proponent must provide an estimate of the volume of the stems of commercial trees in the forest to be managed and conduct a “100% survey” that identifies and maps all trees with a diameter greater than 50.0 cm at breast height (DBH: measured 1.30 m above of the ground or just above any buttresses), 50.0 cm being the minimum cut diameter (DMC—Brazilian acronym). The harvesting process must also follow the legislation established for PMFSes. For projects using machinery for logging, the initial cutting cycle must be 25–35 years in length and the cutting intensity cannot surpass 30 m³ ha
−1 [
25]. In addition, a logging authorization (AUTEX) is required from the government body that approves the beginning of harvesting in each annual production unit (UPA); this document specifies the maximum volume per species allowed for harvesting. The managers must present annual operating plans (POAs) specifying the maximum volume to be harvested each year; alteration of land use is only permitted in 20.0% of the area, after discounting the areas of permanent protection (APPs) required by Brazil’s Forest Code [
25,
26]. The restrictions are intended to ensure the protection and sustainability of the forest by not allowing significant changes in the horizontal and vertical structures of the forest and by not allowing the removal of all individuals of any given species. The forest-management plans have the objectives of minimizing harvest and post-harvest impacts, providing society with low-impact end products, and, theoretically, providing a sustainable source of income to the local community [
15,
19].
Brazilian legislation on forest management does not require estimates of carbon stocks [
27]. Management activities can be regulated to maintain economic benefits, to minimize environmental damage, and to allow accurate carbon accounting. Forest management can potentially help reduce concentrations of greenhouse gases by retaining carbon stocks in the final sawmill products. Other factors that need to be taken into account to better assess the net effects of management include the rate of deterioration of product stocks, the quantities of unused parts of harvested trees (sawmill waste and tree crowns, stumps and roots), collateral damage to unharvested trees, and forest mortality, including that from the fires that have increased the probability of occurring in partially harvested forests [
28,
29]. The value attributed to time in carbon accounting is critical in the balance of benefits and costs to climate from forest management and its wood products. Forest management in the Brazilian Amazon is less aggressive than deforestation for large-scale agriculture, such as the expansion of monocultures for the production of biofuels [
30].
In forest management in the Amazon, the log is the tree component harvested and removed from the management system [
18,
27]. The final sawn-wood products are obtained from logs in sawmills for primary preparation [
31,
32,
33]. Primary products (such as planks, beams, and rafters) and their subsequent use to manufacture furniture or for construction of structures (e.g., floor covering, roof structures, and windows frames) [
18] generate employment and income in the production chain and also provides a carbon stock service [
34] by maintaining carbon in products with life expectancies of decades to hundreds of years [
35]. The volumetric yield (percentage of a log that is transformed into useful sawn wood) of commercial timber species in the Amazon is still low (41.1% on average), while waste production is high [
31,
33]. It is important to pursue higher volumetric yields because of the importance of timber products in carbon storage and their contribution to mitigating climate change [
18,
28].
Obtaining final sawn-wood products generates waste that is often burned as an energy source. Burning this waste to replace fossil fuels in thermal power plants is common in Brazil’s Amazon region and returns CO
2 to the atmosphere [
18,
33,
36,
37]. If the biomass comes from a sustainably managed forest, the CO
2 released will be reabsorbed as the harvested plots regrow. Electricity generation from biomass from sustainable sources causes lower net CO
2 emission than does generation from fossil fuels [
37].
The carbon stock in timber products obtained from logs from managed forests is related to time and permanence [
38,
39]. Wood stores carbon throughout the life of products, over a period of years [
39,
40,
41,
42]. In this way, they contribute to mitigate climate change over the period [
43,
44,
45]. However, after their useful life, they are usually either buried in landfills or burned, emitting CO
2, thus affecting the emissions balance. However, these emissions from decomposition of discarded wood products occur in smaller quantities over time until they become neutral [
18,
39,
45,
46]. In addition, wood products can replace the use of more greenhouse-intensive products that require large amounts of energy in production and that are derived from raw materials, such as iron or aluminum, that also have impacts on emissions [
47]. Accordingly, the information we present here is relevant both for the economics of logging in Amazonia and for efforts to reduce CO
2 emissions from this process by increasing the carbon stock from the forest that is held in the final manufactured products. If the net effect of forest management is positive for climate change mitigation, then the carbon benefit may provide both a means of reducing the impact of deforestation in the Amazon and a source of income for the local population. The objective of the present study is to quantify the carbon stock transferred to timber products from logs removed from an area under forest management in Brazil’s state of Acre.
4. Discussion
The carbon stored in tree-derived products varies with basic wood density and carbon content and such tree attributes as diameter and height [
64,
65,
66,
67]. Importantly, some genera among the industry-preferred species, such as
Eschweilera, are hyper-dominant in the Amazon rainforest [
68], which may be an important factor for management and harvest.
In the current study, estimates of volume, biomass, and carbon stocks are affected by variations in the minimum DBH in a forest-management system in Brazil and by the basic wood density. Generally, species with the highest carbon storage had the highest wood densities (
Figure 2 and
Table 2). These species are desired for their resistance and durability, and the sawing process minimizes the generation of sawdust and other residues [
34]. Wood density was a determining factor in the storage of biomass and carbon in the log and, consequently, in wood products [
60,
62]. This information allowed us to evaluate the most common commercial species and how they contribute individually to the carbon stock and to the supply of durable wood products that do not emit CO
2 for a long time [
34]. In addition, this information can contribute to discussions on forest harvesting and on the minimization of greenhouse gas emissions from wood products obtained from tropical forest management [
27,
34].
The volumetric yield coefficient (VYC; 52.3%,
Table 3) for logs lies within the value range that has been estimated for Brazil’s Amazonian states of Pará, Rondônia, and Amazonas (41.0% to 59.7%) [
32,
33]. However, our VYC value is higher than the 45% value used since December 2016 [
54] for this conversion by federal authorities in determining whether sawn-wood volumes are consistent with approved harvests from management plans. The previous value used for this was the 35% value given in CONAMA Resolution 474 of 6 April 2016 [
53], and prior to that it was 45% [
52]. If the official conversion factor is unrealistically low, it offers a means of “laundering” illegally harvested wood.
The volume yield in the sawmill can be affected by compounds in the wood such as terpenoids, acidic resins, and phenolic substances, which are present in some species and can affect the operation of sawmill equipment [
36,
67,
69] and cause variations in the ease with which logs can be cut, as well as in the yield of each processed log. The carbon yield coefficient (CYC) of the log, the VYC, and the basic wood density were key factors in determining the low carbon storage in the low wood-density species, as was also observed by Nogueira et al. [
62], Chave et al. [
61], and Goodman et al. [
57]. The unused percentage of the log volume (100.0% − 52.3% VYC = 47.7%) and carbon (100% − 53.2% CYC = 46.8%) represents sawmill waste that returns to the atmosphere as CO
2. Not all of this carbon represents a net emission because waste can be burned as an electricity source, replacing fossil fuels [
31,
37]. At the sawmill we studied, people living close to the sawmill use the residues for building fences and other structures and for firewood for domestic cooking and for bakeries and brick kilns [
34].
Products derived from high-density species (“
madeiras duras”) store more carbon than do those derived from low-density species (“
madeiras moles”) [
62,
64,
65], indicating the importance of prioritizing the former from the standpoint of carbon storage (assuming that product recovery for the two types is equal). As a consequence, we recommend that low-density species be left in the forest, both because this avoids their large contribution to sawmill waste and because their remaining in the forest helps fulfill environmental functions such as water and nutrient cycling. In addition, areas under management should be enriched with species that store large amounts of carbon, such as
Dipteryx odorata, Apuleia leiocarpa, Handroanthus serratifolius, Eschweilera bracteosa, Eschweilera grandiflora, Hymenaea courbaril, and
Cedrela odorata. This would result in post-harvest processes that help maintain ecological diversity [
19] and would contribute to providing wood products under harvest cycles of 30–35 years [
18,
24].
The high values for the boards and the low values for the small beams (
Table 5) are influenced by the DBH, shape of the trunk, basic density of the wood, and number (N) of pieces and their dimensions (width, thickness, and length) [
55,
64,
65]. However, the production of beams is important in the market. The beams are derived from high-density wood (
Dipteryx odorata, Apuleia leiocarpa), these being species that sequester more carbon [
64]. On the other hand, the largest stocks of carbon in products (rafters, battens, boards, planks, beams, and small beams) are found in the largest diameter classes [
65]. In our study, the largest carbon stocks were found in the classes with centers 95 cm or above (
Table 6). However, carbon stocks were lower in the class with centers >105 cm DBH, which is explained by the fact that there are fewer individuals in the upper classes.
Carbon storage in tropical forests maintains carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and mitigates climate change [
16,
70]. Forest management with low-impact harvesting techniques allows the conservation of most of the forest carbon stock and its diversity through selective extraction and taking advantage of non-wood products [
19,
71,
72,
73,
74]. This offers social, economic, and environmental benefits [
72]. If the alternative is deforestation, forest management is clearly preferable for climate [
28]. Forest management also makes a positive contribution to climate mitigation through flows of forest carbon to pools in long-lived wood products. The carbon stocks in sawn-wood pools quantified in this paper will be reduced by the losses that occur [
18,
19,
34] when this wood is transformed into houses, furniture, and other end products [
39,
40]. Storage of carbon in wood products is limited by the useful life of the wood, which is related to the treatment of time and permanence in accounting for global-warming mitigation benefits [
38,
39] remaining constant over time [
75]. Wood products store carbon over years and emit carbon at the end of their useful life, which is affected by the final decomposition of wood [
39,
40,
41,
42]. After the products’ lifetimes have ended, they are usually burned or buried in landfills, emitting greenhouse gases and affecting the balance of emissions in progressively smaller quantities over time until the effect becomes neutral [
18,
39,
45,
46]. Therefore, forest management affects the carbon storage and environmental quality of its products [
18,
76].
Much of the wood presently harvested in Brazilian Amazonia does not come from forest management; instead, it comes either from illegal logging or from areas that are being deforested for agriculture and ranching (e.g., Brancalion et al. (2018) [
13], Ferrante and Fearnside (2018) [
30], Uhl and Buschabacher (1985) [
77] Regardless of its origin, the carbon in harvested logs is being transferred to wood products that will maintain it out of the atmosphere for a given period of time. The lifespans of the different products, and the value attributed to time, will determine this transfer’s net contribution to mitigating global warming. In addition to the delayed emission of carbon from forest products, forest management emits carbon immediately in the sawmill waste quantified in this paper. Other emissions include decay of the stumps and crowns of harvested trees [
28]. To these must be added the decay of trees killed from collateral damage in logging operations and the decay of the roots of trees killed both by harvesting and by collateral damage [
28]. Over a period of years, forest regeneration recovers a part of the lost carbon stock, but carbon remains in the atmosphere, causing global warming during the recovery period. If the forest carbon stock stabilizes over successive management cycles, the accumulation of carbon in forest products can eventually pay back the carbon “debt” that results from the equilibrium carbon stock in the forest being lower than that in the unlogged forest, thus producing a future climate benefit. Again, the value attributed to time determines the magnitude and the sign of the effect of forest management on climate.
Selective logging increases the probability of Amazonian forest fires (e.g., Uhl and Bushbacher (1985) [
77], Nepstad et al. (1999) [
78], Berenguer et al. (2014) [
79]). This is due to the deadwood left in the forest from logging and from collateral damage, together with the opening of gaps in the forest canopy that allow sunlight and wind to dry combustible material on the forest floor [
34,
77]. Extreme events made more frequent by climate change are already increasing the occurrence and scale of forest fires in Amazonia, including Acre [
80]. The first fire that occurs in an area initiates a positive-feedback process, where dead wood from trees killed by the fire and the opening of holes in the canopy make the forest more vulnerable to a sequence of subsequent fires that can destroy the forest completely [
79,
81,
82]. The carbon consequences of the increased probability of forest fires in logged forests, including those with reduced-impact logging practices, must also be taken into account in assessing the overall role of forest management in climate change.
Forest management in Amazonia is in its initial stages, where unlogged forest is being incorporated into management systems, which makes the implications for climate different from what would apply to the continuation of a management system that has been in place for multiple harvest cycles and has reached an equilibrium state. Many of the carbon-accumulation processes associated with forest management are slow, such as the accumulation of carbon stocks in long-lived product pools and the recovery of forest biomass after logging [
28]. This makes the importance of time (expressed, for example, through a discount rate for carbon) a critical factor in calculations of climatic benefits [
28,
72,
83]. The carbon benefit of forest management depends heavily on the long-term sustainability of the management systems. This depends on maintaining a continuous flow of revenue that renders this investment option profitable as compared to competing opportunities. In addition to revenues from the sale of wood, new revenues can be added to forest management, such as payments for environmental services. For this to occur, solutions must be found for the economic rationale that leads to abandoning potentially sustainable forest-management systems once the first harvest cycle has been completed [
29,
84,
85,
86,
87]. Tapping the value of the environmental services of the forest has been proposed as a solution to this problem [
85,
88,
89].
Providing benefits over time requires that the forest-management system be sustained in practice (not just that it be theoretically sustainable in technical terms), and this requires that the system provide a continuous income stream that is sufficient to make it commercially attractive throughout the harvest cycle [
29]. This is frequently not the case because a loophole in Brazil’s forestry regulations allows harvesting an entire management area in the first few years of the harvest cycle ([
90], Article 5, Paragraph 1; [
91], Article 3.3, Paragraph 5, thus implying a long period without an income source to support the management system and a strong motive for the areas to be sold once harvesting is complete, thus, in practice, making the areas subject to deforestation [
92].
Forest management must go beyond simple carbon-stock considerations, especially since, even in managed areas with legally permitted harvest intensities, the impacts of logging on biodiversity and ecosystem services have been found to be extensive [
93,
94]. It should be noted that Amazonia has already reached its tolerable deforestation limit, making development alternatives that maintain standing forests an urgent priority [
95]. Current development policies, which encourage the expansion of monocultures in the Amazon region, may result in the collapse of vital ecosystem services such as the export of water vapor from Amazonia to southern and southeastern Brazil by the winds known as ‘’flying rivers’’ (e.g.,Arraut et al. (2012) [
96], Zemp et al. (2014) [
97]). This has the potential to drastically affect the country’s agriculture and the supply of water to major cities like São Paulo [
98]. The potential role of Amazonian forest management in averting deforestation, therefore, merits special attention.
The present paper presents data on the transfer of carbon from harvested logs to wood products, which is only one of the many factors that must be quantified in order to assess the effect, either positive or negative, of Amazonian forest management on global climate. A complete analysis must include emissions from sawmill waste; decay of wood products; unharvested portions of trees such as branches, stumps, and roots; collateral damage to the forest from harvesting operations, log decks, trails, and access roads; and the increased probability of forest fires in logged forest. These analyses must also consider realistic scenarios for future land use both for a scenario with the project and for a scenario without the project. The scenario with the project cannot simply assume that management will be sustainable and that it will continue until the end of the agreed harvest cycle, much less that it will continue indefinitely. The rate of carbon recovery in the harvested forest must be estimated, as well as the recovery of harvestable stocks of commercial species that are expected to sustain future harvest cycles. The timing of all carbon flows between the atmosphere and the forest and the stocks of wood products must be estimated, and their value to climate calculated based on the value attributed to time for carbon accounting must also be calculated. The value attributed to time is an ethical and political decision rather than a scientific one [
84].
Although calculating the effect of forest management on climate is beyond the scope of this paper, the data we provide here contributes a part of the information needed for that evaluation, whether or not forest management is judged to be a benefit for climate. If forest management has a net benefit for climate, having reliable estimates for carbon transfer to wood products will be part of the suite of estimates needed to underpin rewarding these benefits, thus motivating more sustainable use of the forest.