TY - JOUR
T1 - Human and environmental controls over aboveground carbon storage in Madagascar
AU - Asner, Gregory P.
AU - Clark, John K.
AU - Mascaro, Joseph
AU - Vaudry, Romuald
AU - Chadwick, K. Dana
AU - Vieilledent, Ghislain
AU - Rasamoelina, Maminiaina
AU - Balaji, Aravindh
AU - Kennedy-Bowdoin, Ty
AU - Maatoug, Léna
AU - Colgan, Matthew S.
AU - Knapp, David E.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the GoodPlanet Foundation and WWF-Madagascar for vegetation mapping and field measurement assistance, and additional logistical support. We thank G. Powell and N. O’Connor for decision support and logistical help, and C. Grinand and three anonymous reviewers for providing helpful comments on the manuscript. The Carnegie Airborne Observatory flight campaign to the region was supported by the Andrew Mellon Foundation, the Carnegie Institution and Air France. The Carnegie Airborne Observatory is made possible by the Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the W.M. Keck Foundation, and William Hearst III.
PY - 2012/1/30
Y1 - 2012/1/30
N2 - Background: Accurate, high-resolution mapping of aboveground carbon density (ACD, Mg C ha-1) could provide insight into human and environmental controls over ecosystem state and functioning, and could support conservation and climate policy development. However, mapping ACD has proven challenging, particularly in spatially complex regions harboring a mosaic of land use activities, or in remote montane areas that are difficult to access and poorly understood ecologically. Using a combination of field measurements, airborne Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) and satellite data, we present the first large-scale, high-resolution estimates of aboveground carbon stocks in Madagascar.Results: We found that elevation and the fraction of photosynthetic vegetation (PV) cover, analyzed throughout forests of widely varying structure and condition, account for 27-67% of the spatial variation in ACD. This finding facilitated spatial extrapolation of LiDAR-based carbon estimates to a total of 2,372,680 ha using satellite data. Remote, humid sub-montane forests harbored the highest carbon densities, while ACD was suppressed in dry spiny forests and in montane humid ecosystems, as well as in most lowland areas with heightened human activity. Independent of human activity, aboveground carbon stocks were subject to strong physiographic controls expressed through variation in tropical forest canopy structure measured using airborne LiDAR.Conclusions: High-resolution mapping of carbon stocks is possible in remote regions, with or without human activity, and thus carbon monitoring can be brought to highly endangered Malagasy forests as a climate-change mitigation and biological conservation strategy.
AB - Background: Accurate, high-resolution mapping of aboveground carbon density (ACD, Mg C ha-1) could provide insight into human and environmental controls over ecosystem state and functioning, and could support conservation and climate policy development. However, mapping ACD has proven challenging, particularly in spatially complex regions harboring a mosaic of land use activities, or in remote montane areas that are difficult to access and poorly understood ecologically. Using a combination of field measurements, airborne Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) and satellite data, we present the first large-scale, high-resolution estimates of aboveground carbon stocks in Madagascar.Results: We found that elevation and the fraction of photosynthetic vegetation (PV) cover, analyzed throughout forests of widely varying structure and condition, account for 27-67% of the spatial variation in ACD. This finding facilitated spatial extrapolation of LiDAR-based carbon estimates to a total of 2,372,680 ha using satellite data. Remote, humid sub-montane forests harbored the highest carbon densities, while ACD was suppressed in dry spiny forests and in montane humid ecosystems, as well as in most lowland areas with heightened human activity. Independent of human activity, aboveground carbon stocks were subject to strong physiographic controls expressed through variation in tropical forest canopy structure measured using airborne LiDAR.Conclusions: High-resolution mapping of carbon stocks is possible in remote regions, with or without human activity, and thus carbon monitoring can be brought to highly endangered Malagasy forests as a climate-change mitigation and biological conservation strategy.
KW - Aboveground carbon density
KW - Biomass
KW - Carbon stocks
KW - Carnegie airborne observatory
KW - Claslite
KW - Lidar
KW - Redd
KW - Tropical forest
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U2 - 10.1186/1750-0680-7-2
DO - 10.1186/1750-0680-7-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 22289685
AN - SCOPUS:84856242111
SN - 1750-0680
VL - 7
JO - Carbon Balance and Management
JF - Carbon Balance and Management
M1 - 2
ER -