Lilli Kaarakka, Meredith Cornett, Grant Domke, Todd Ont, and Laura Dee published a paper reviewing forest management as a natural climate solution. The paper looks at the evidence for the potential of specific forestry practices to sequester carbon and gives guidance for practitioners in the Great Lakes region of the United States.
You can download the paper here: https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/2688-8319.12090
From the paper:
In the United States, timber harvesting is the most extensive disturbance across forestlands both in terms of area and C impacts, and 89%of the timber harvested annually comes from private lands. Thus, decisions around forest and land management alter the role of forests as a C sink. Forest management, defined as applying appropriate, sustainable practices to a forest to achieve certain outcomes (i.e., timber, recreational opportunities, etc.), can influence C sequestration by (1)increasing forest cover (reforestation or afforestation), (2) maintaining existing forest cover (avoided deforestation) and (3) managing existing forests. Although US forests at present are C sinks, large uncertainty remains about the future persistence and magnitude of this sink under rotational, single-species forest management.