The objective of the study was to quantify the production and biomass distribution of some potential arboreal species of multiple uses, under dry land conditions, in the Brazilian Semi-arid. The study was developed in the Experimental Station of Caatinga, of Embrapa Semi-Árido, Petrolina-PE, Brazil. Plant height and diameter at breast height (DBH) of 16 central trees of each plot, from three replicates, were measured. The following species were studied: Leucaena diversifolia, Caesalpinia velutina, Caesalpinia coriaria, Mimosa tenuiflora and Ateleia herbert-smithii. Biomass was estimated based on the medium height tree in each plot, evaluating each component separately: leaf, bark, branch, root and log, except for A. herbert-smithii that produced more leaf than bark. Total biomass production was superior for C. velutina (51.6 kg ha-1), followed by L. diversifolia (36.6 kg ha-1), A. herbert-smithii (26.4 kg ha-1), Caesalpinia coriaria (23.0 kg ha-1) and Mimosa tenuiflora (21.6 kg ha-1 However, leaf dry matter, the main potential component of forage species, was higher for C. velutina y A. herbert-smithii (2.8 kg ha-1) and C. coriaria (2.2 kg ha-1), L. diversifolia (2.0 kg ha-1) and M. tenuiflora (1.3 kg ha-1) representing, respectively, 7.2, 10.7, 9.5, 5.3 and 6.3% of total biomass. C. velutina stands out as the most productive, as well as wood (log = 30.8 t ha-1) as forage (leaves = 3.7 t ha-1), while M. tenuiflora showed the lowest forage potential.
Forage trees; multiple use trees; biomass production