STATE AND CHANGE IN CARBON POOLS IN THE FORESTS OF TROPICAL AFRICA

Citation
G. Gaston et al., STATE AND CHANGE IN CARBON POOLS IN THE FORESTS OF TROPICAL AFRICA, Global change biology, 4(1), 1998, pp. 97-114
Citations number
64
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology,"Environmental Sciences","Biology Miscellaneous
Journal title
ISSN journal
13541013
Volume
4
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
97 - 114
Database
ISI
SICI code
1354-1013(1998)4:1<97:SACICP>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
To improve estimates of the state and change in C pools due to changes in land use in tropical forests of Africa, we combined spatially expl icit estimates of biomass C density, obtained by modelling in a geogra phical information system (GIS), with new data on the area of forests (woody formations with a minimum of 10% crown cover) reported at subna tional units for 1980 and 1990 by the Food and Agriculture Organizatio n (FAG). Estimates of the biomass C densities for grass/shrub savannas were also included using a simple model based on precipitation. The t otal C pool in above-and below-ground forests and grass/shrub savannas of Africa for 1980 was 50.8 Pg (10(15)g), with aboveground forest bio mass accounting for 75% of the total, below-ground forest biomass for 21%, and grass/shrub savannas for 4%. Area weighted mean biomass C den sities were about 180 Mg ha(-1) for lowland moist forests, 82 Mg ha(-1 ) for all forests, and 6 Mg ha(-1) for grass savannas. The total chang e in the aboveground forest C pool for the decade 1980-90 due to chang es in land cover and use was estimated to be a decrease of 6.6 Pg C. O f this total, 43% was due to deforestation and 57% due to biomass redu ction by other human activities. Six countries, mostly in central Afri ca, accounted for more than 73% of the total change in the C pool. The difference between state and change of C pool estimates made at the s ubnational scale and those made at the national scale proved to be ins ignificant across the region as a whole (2% for pools and -1% for chan ge in pool) but potentially important to individual. countries (from 36% to -39% for pools and from +43% to -57% for change in pool). The d ifferences between the two approaches may reflect a better match of th e areas being deforested with the biomass C density of forests being c leared.