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The study of carbon storage of prominent plant species in the summer and rainy seasons of Bang Rak ,Trang

Country:Thailand
Student(s):Ailanda Samansanti, Phawaran Gamvirat and Waritsara Promsri
Grade Level:Middle School (grades 6-8, ages 11-14)
GLOBE Teacher:Patchara Pongmanawut
Contributors:Assoc. Prof. Dr. Mullica Jaroensutasinee and Assoc. Prof. Dr. Krisanadej Jaroensutasinee from Walailak University Dr. Anantanit Chumsri from Rajamangala University of Technology Srivijaya Trang campus The Institute for the Promotion of Teaching Science and Technology (IPST)
Report Type(s):International Virtual Science Symposium Report, Standard Research Report
Protocols:Precipitation, Biometry (including Tree Height)
Presentation Video: View Video
Presentation Poster: View Document
Optional Badges:I am a Collaborator, I am a Data Scientist, I make an Impact
Language(s):English
Date Submitted:03/06/2024
Tree hight
The objective of this project is to study of carbon storage of prominent plant species in the summer and rainy seasons of Bang Rak ,Trang, White cheese wood Tree, Indian oak, Yang Na Tree and sentang to compare the carbon sequestration of the dominant tree species in the summer and rainy season in Bang Rak. Summer in February -March 2023 and during the rainy season in July - August 2023, the authors collected tree data using the GLOBE observer trees height app, i.e. height and circumference of trees, and then used the data to calculate the biomass of trees and analyze the amount of carbon sequestered in trees according to the principle of the allometry equation. Carbon-Storage app The results showed that the growth of each dominant plant species The height, circumference and amount of rainy season carbon storage are higher than in summer for all varieties and there are statistically significant differences. The dominant tree with the highest average increase in height is sentang, Indian oak tree is the dominant tree with the highest average increase in circumference, and Indian oak tree has the highest increase in carbon sequestration over summer, accounting for 40.19 percent.



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