“…Despite their relatively small spatial footprint, riparian forests will usually have more favorable growing conditions (e.g., soil moisture), and they may accumulate carbon stocks at a greater rate than upland forests (Matzek, Stella, & Ropion, 2018;Naiman, Decamps, & McClain, 2010;Sutfin, Wohl, & Dwire, 2016), contributing more to rapid carbon sequestration in the short-term. Further, riparian ecosystems are widely recognized to provide numerous ecosystem services (Daigneault, Eppink, & Lee, 2017;Naiman et al, 2010;O'Brien et al, 2017), having the potential to mitigate the effects of climate change (Capon et al, 2013), and being biodiversity hotspots that provide critical habitat for fish and wildlife (Knopf, Johnson, Rich, Samson, & Szaro, 1988;Naiman et al, 2010). Because riparian ecosystems have been severely degraded worldwide (Nilsson & Berggren, 2000;Perry, Andersen, Reynolds, Nelson, & Shafroth, 2012;Zedler & Kercher, 2005), riparian forest restoration may be a valuable strategy for providing both rapid carbon sequestration value and long-term ecosystem services returns.…”