| Literature DB >> 32796858 |
Celso H L Silva Junior1,2, Viola H A Heinrich3, Ana T G Freire4, Igor S Broggio5,6, Thais M Rosan7, Juan Doblas8, Liana O Anderson5,9, Guillaume X Rousseau10, Yosio E Shimabukuro8, Carlos A Silva11,12, Joanna I House3, Luiz E O C Aragão5,8,7.
Abstract
The restoration and reforestation of 12 million hectares of forests by 2030 are amongst the leading mitigation strategies for reducing carbon emissions within the Brazilian Nationally Determined Contribution targets assumed under the Paris Agreement. Understanding the dynamics of forest cover, which steeply decreased between 1985 and 2018 throughout Brazil, is essential for estimating the global carbon balance and quantifying the provision of ecosystem services. To know the long-term increment, extent, and age of secondary forests is crucial; however, these variables are yet poorly quantified. Here we developed a 30-m spatial resolution dataset of the annual increment, extent, and age of secondary forests for Brazil over the 1986-2018 period. Land-use and land-cover maps from MapBiomas Project (Collection 4.1) were used as input data for our algorithm, implemented in the Google Earth Engine platform. This dataset provides critical spatially explicit information for supporting carbon emissions reduction, biodiversity, and restoration policies, enabling environmental science applications, territorial planning, and subsidizing environmental law enforcement.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32796858 PMCID: PMC7427968 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-020-00600-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Fig. 1Forest cover of Brazil. In the main map, black lines represent the Brazilian biomes: 1. Amazon; 2. Caatinga; 3. Cerrado; 4. Atlantic Forest; 5. Pampa; 6. Pantanal. Source: land-use and land-cover map of 2018 from the MapBiomas Project (http://mapbiomas.org).
Fig. 2Workflow of the proposed method.
Fig. 3Conceptual model of the approach used to calculate the age of secondary forests throughout the Brazilian territory.
Fig. 4(a) Scatter-plot for the relationship between the proportion of the secondary forest within the 10 by 10 km cells in the two datasets. The dashed blue line is the 1:1 line; the red line is the average regression from the bootstrap approach with 10,000 interactions; the dashed red lines are regressions using the standard deviation values of the equation parameters. All p-values from the 10,000 bootstrap interactions were lower than 0.001. (b) Jitter-plot for the proportion of the secondary forest within the 10 by 10 km cells. The red dot is the mean, and the red vertical line the standard deviation.
The non-parametric Mann-Whitney test by TerraClass Cell Proportion Intervals.
| Statistics | TerraClass Cell Proportion Intervals | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–10% | 11–20% | 21–30% | 31–40% | 41–80% | ||
| W | 755,276,307 | 3,078,744 | 115,974 | 10,698 | 3,844 | |
| p | <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 | <0.001 | |
| n | 40,881 | 1,898 | 348 | 104 | 62 | |
| % | 94.40 | 4.40 | 0.80 | 0.20 | 0.10 | |
| Mean ± SD | TerraClass (% cell−1) | 1.40 ± 2.48 | 14.65 ± 2.66 | 25.21 ± 2.82 | 35.43 ± 3.16 | 48.74 ± 7.66 |
| This Study (% cell−1) | 1.19 ± 2.32 | 8.88 ± 4.94 | 13.84 ± 6.25 | 16.57 ± 6.87 | 16.97 ± 8.77 | |
In the table, W is the Mann-Whitney test statistic, p is the p-value, n is the number of observations, % is the percentage of the total sample size in each class, and SD is the standard deviation.
Extent of the secondary forests area in each Brazilian biome in 2018.
| Biome | Extent (km2) | Extent (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon | 148,764 | 56.61 |
| Atlantic Forest | 70,218 | 26.72 |
| Caatinga | 6,106 | 2.32 |
| Cerrado | 34,115 | 12.98 |
| Pampa | 2,469 | 0.94 |
| Pantanal | 1,120 | 0.43 |
| Brazil | 262,791 | 100 |
Fig. 5(a) Map of Brazil with secondary forests identified using the process outlined in the text. The detailed map on the left shows the age of secondary forests in the Amazon, while the detailed map on the right shows the age of secondary forests in the Atlantic Forest. (b–g) Histogram of secondary forest age for each Brazilian biome. The dashed black lines represent the age threshold where more than 50% of secondary forests are accumulated.
Estimated cumulative net carbon uptake by secondary forests in each Brazilian biome between 1986 and 2018 (considering all stand secondary forests pixels in 2018).
| Biome | Net Uptake (Tg C) | Net Uptake (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon | 436 ± 26.84 | 52.21 |
| Atlantic Forest | 260 ± 15.98 | 31.08 |
| Caatinga | 17 ± 1.03 | 2.01 |
| Cerrado | 111 ± 6.83 | 13.29 |
| Pampa | 8 ± 0.52 | 1.00 |
| Pantanal | 3 ± 0.21 | 0.42 |
| Brazil | 835 ± 51.40 | 100 |
The numbers in the second column are the net uptake values with the plus or minus signal representing the standard deviation of the estimations.
| Measurement(s) | secondary forest • age • Increment • Extent • secondary forest loss |
| Technology Type(s) | remote sensing • computational modeling technique • digital curation |
| Factor Type(s) | year of data collection |
| Sample Characteristic - Environment | tropical • forest ecosystem |
| Sample Characteristic - Location | Brazil |