Land Use Land/Cover Change Reduces Woody Plant Diversity and Carbon Stocks in a Lowland Coastal Forest Ecosystem, Tanzania
View/ Open
Date
2022-07-13Author
Ntukey, Lucas
Munishi, Linus
Treydte, Anna
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The East-African lowland coastal forest (LCF) is one of Africa’s centres of species endemism,
representing an important biodiversity hotspot. However, deforestation and forest degradation due to
the high demand for fuelwood has reduced forest cover and diversity, with unknown consequences
for associated terrestrial carbon stocks in this LCF system. Our study assessed spatio-temporal
land use and land cover changes (LULC) in 1998, 2008, 2018 in the LCF ecosystem, Tanzania. In
addition, we conducted a forest inventory survey and calculated associated carbon storage for this
LCF ecosystem. Using methods of land use change evaluation plug-in in QGIS based on historical
land use data, we modelled carbon stock trends post-2018 in associated LULC for the future 30 years.
We found that agriculture and grassland combined increased substantially by 21.5% between the year
1998 and 2018 while forest cover declined by 29%. Furthermore, forest above-ground live biomass
carbon (AGC) was 2.4 times higher in forest than in the bushland, 5.8 times in the agriculture with
scattered settlement and 14.8 times higher than in the grassland. The estimated average soil organic
carbon (SOC) was 76.03 ± 6.26 t/ha across the entire study area. Our study helps to identify land use
impacts on ecosystem services, supporting decision-makers in future land-use planning.