| Literature DB >> 32944066 |
Martin Brandt1, Kjeld Rasmussen1, Pierre Hiernaux2, Stefanie Herrmann3, Compton J Tucker4, Xiaoye Tong1, Feng Tian1, Ole Mertz1, Laurent Kergoat2, Cheikh Mbow5, John David4, Katherine Melocik4, Morgane Dendoncker6, Caroline Vincke6, Rasmus Fensholt1.
Abstract
Woody vegetation in farmland acts as a carbon sink and provides ecosystem services for local people, but no macro-scale assessments of the impact of management and climate on woody cover exists for drylands. Here we make use of very high spatial resolution satellite imagery to derive wall-to-wall woody cover patterns in tropical West African drylands. Our study reveals a consistently high woody cover in farmlands along all semi-arid and sub-humid rainfall zones (16%), on average only 6% lower than in savannas. In semi-arid Sahel, farmland management increases woody cover to a greater level (12%) than found in neighbouring savannas (6%), whereas farmlands in sub-humid zones have a reduced woody cover (20%) as compared to savannas (30%). In the region as a whole, rainfall, terrain and soil are the most important (80%) determinants of woody cover, while management factors play a smaller (20%) role. We conclude that agricultural expansion cannot generally be claimed to cause woody cover losses, and that observations in Sahel contradict simplistic ideas of a high negative correlation between population density and woody cover.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 32944066 PMCID: PMC7493051 DOI: 10.1038/s41561-018-0092-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Geosci ISSN: 1752-0894 Impact factor: 16.908