| Foreword | |
| Preface | |
| Acknowledgements | |
| Workshop Summary Statement | p. 3 |
| The Global Terrestrial Carbon Cycle | p. 19 |
| Boreal Forests and Tundra | p. 39 |
| Contribution of Temperature Forests to the World's Carbon Budget | p. 55 |
| Tropical Forests: Their Past, Present, and Potential Future Role in the Terrestrial Carbon Budget | p. 71 |
| Assessment of C Budget for Grasslands and Drylands of the World | p. 95 |
| Agricultural Sources and Sinks of Carbon | p. 111 |
| Land and Water Interface Zones | p. 123 |
| Biomass Management and Energy | p. 139 |
| Contribution of Northern Forests to the Global C Cycle: Canada as a Case Study | p. 163 |
| Carbon Sequestration in Norway Spruce in South Sweden as Influenced by Air Pollution, Water Availability, and Fertilization | p. 177 |
| Impact of Forests on Net National Emissions of Carbon Dioxide in West Europe | p. 187 |
| The Potential Aboveground Carbon Storage of North American Forests | p. 197 |
| Comparison of Two Methods to Assess the Carbon Budget of Forest Biomes in the Former Soviet Union | p. 207 |
| Pools and Fluxes of Biogenic Carbon in the Former Soviet Union | p. 223 |
| Forest Management and Carbon Storage: An Analysis of 12 Key Forest Nations | p. 239 |
| Effects of Atmospheric CO[subscript 2] Enrichment on CO[subscript 2] Exchange Rates of Beech Stands in Small Model Ecosystems | p. 259 |
| Carbon Trends of Productive Temperature Forests of the Coterminous United States | p. 279 |
| The Carbon Cycle and Global Forest Ecosystem | p. 295 |
| Forest Responses to CO[subscript 2] Enrichment and Climate Warming | p. 309 |
| Present Role of German Forests and Forestry in the National Carbon Budget and Options to Its Increase | p. 325 |
| Potential For Carbon Sequenstration in the Drylands | p. 341 |
| Analysis of Agroecosystem Carbon Pools | p. 357 |
| Managing Crop Residues for the Retention of Carbon | p. 373 |
| CO[subscript 2]-Emissions from Agriculture: Sources and Mitigation Potentials | p. 381 |
| The Effect of Trends in Tillage Practices on Erosion and Carbon Content of Soils in the US Corn Belt | p. 389 |
| The Impact of Cultivation on Carbon Fluxes in Woody Savannes of Southern Africa | p. 403 |
| Potential Impacts of Elevated CO[subscript 2] and Above- and Belowground Litter Quality of a Tallgrass Prairie | p. 413 |
| Diumal and Seasonal Carbon Dioxide Exchange and Its Components in Temperate Grasslands in the Netherlands - An Outline of the Methodology | p. 425 |
| Major Carbon Reservoirs of the Pedosphere; Source - Sink Relations; Potential of D[superscript 14]C and [actual symbol not reproducible] as Supporting Methodologies | p. 431 |
| Riverine Transport of Atmospheric Carbon: Sources, Global Typology and Budget | p. 443 |
| Accord Between Ocean Models Predicting Uptake of Anthropogenic CO[subscript 2] | p. 465 |
| U.S. Carbon Offset Potential Using Biomass Energy Systems | p. 483 |
| Utilising Biomass Crops as an Energy Source: A European Perspective | p. 499 |
| Forest Management and Biomass in the U.S.A. | p. 519 |
| CO[subscript 2]-Mitigation by Agroforestry | p. 533 |
| Terrestrial Carbon Management and Electric Utilities | p. 545 |
| Forest Sector Carbon Offset Projects: Near-Term Opportunities to Mitigate Greenhouse Gas Emissions | p. 561 |
| Manupilating Biotic Carbon Sources and Sinks for Climate Change Mitigation: Can Science Keep Up With Practice? | p. 579 |
| The Interaction of Climate and Land Use in Future Terrestrial Carbon Storage and Release | p. 595 |
| Quantifying Feedback Processes in the Response of the Terrestrial Carbon Cycle to Global Change: The Modeling Approach of Image-2 | p. 615 |
| The Potential Response of Global Terrestrial Carbon Storage To A Climate Change | p. 629 |
| Modeling the Effects of Climatic and CO[subscript 2] Changes on Grassland Storage of Soil C | p. 643 |
| Vegetation Redistribution: A Possible Biosphere Source of CO[subscript 2] During Climatic Change | p. 659 |
| Structure of a Global and Seasonal Carbon Exchange Model for the Terrestrial Biosphere the Frankfurt Biosphere Model (FBM) | p. 675 |
| Epilogue | p. 685 |
| List of Participants | p. 687 |
| Author Index | p. 693 |
| Subject Index | p. 695 |
| Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. |