A practice-led assessment of landscape restoration potential in a biodiversity hotspot

被引:9
|
作者
Wills, Abigail R. [1 ]
Shirima, Deo D. [3 ,4 ]
Villemaire-Cote, Olivier [5 ]
Platts, Philip J. [1 ,6 ,7 ]
Knight, Sarah J. [1 ]
Loveridge, Robin [1 ,8 ]
Seki, Hamidu [1 ]
Waite, Catherine E. [2 ]
Munishi, Pantaleo K. T. [4 ]
Lyatuu, Herman [3 ,9 ]
Bernal, Blanca [10 ]
Pfeifer, Marion [11 ]
Marshall, Andrew R. [1 ,9 ,10 ,11 ]
机构
[1] Univ York, Dept Environm & Geog, York YO10 5NG, England
[2] Sokoine Univ Agr, Natl Carbon Monitoring Ctr, Morogoro, Tanzania
[3] Univ Laval, Ctr Forest Res, Dept Forest & Wood Sci, Quebec City, PQ G1V 0A6, Canada
[4] Univ York, Leverhulme Ctr Anthropocene Biodivers, York YO10 5DD, England
[5] Biodivers Consultancy, Cambridge CB2 1SJ, England
[6] Tanzania Forest Conservat Grp, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
[7] GreenCollar US, Chicago, IL USA
[8] Newcastle Univ, Sch Nat & Environm Sci, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU, England
[9] Univ Sunshine Coast, Forest Res Inst, Sunshine Coast, Qld 4556, Australia
[10] Reforest Africa, POB 5, Mangula, Tanzania
[11] Flamingo Land Ltd, Kirby Misperton YO17 6UX, N Yorkshire, England
基金
澳大利亚研究理事会;
关键词
above-ground biomass; assisted natural regeneration; biodiversity conservation; climate change mitigation; forest landscape restoration; tree-planting; FOREST DEGRADATION; TROPICAL REGIONS; AFRICAN; BIOMASS; ECOSYSTEMS; EMISSIONS; PRIORITY; RECOVERY; SAVANNA; TRAITS;
D O I
10.1098/rstb.2021.0070
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Effective restoration planning tools are needed to mitigate global carbon and biodiversity crises. Published spatial assessments of restoration potential are often at large scales or coarse resolutions inappropriate for local action. Using a Tanzanian case study, we introduce a systematic approach to inform landscape restoration planning, estimating spatial variation in cost-effectiveness, based on restoration method, logistics, biomass modelling and uncertainty mapping. We found potential for biomass recovery across 77.7% of a 53 000 km(2) region, but with some natural spatial discontinuity in moist forest biomass, that was previously assigned to human causes. Most areas with biomass deficit (80.5%) were restorable through passive or assisted natural regeneration. However, cumulative biomass gains from planting outweighed initially high implementation costs meaning that, where applicable, this method yielded greater long-term returns on investment. Accounting for ecological, funding and other uncertainty, the top 25% consistently cost-effective sites were within protected areas and/or moderately degraded moist forest and savanna. Agro-ecological mosaics had high biomass deficit but little cost-effective restoration potential. Socio-economic research will be needed to inform action towards environmental and human development goals in these areas. Our results highlight value in long-term landscape restoration investments and separate treatment of savannas and forests. Furthermore, they contradict previously asserted low restoration potential in East Africa, emphasizing the importance of our regional approach for identifying restoration opportunities across the tropics.This article is part of the theme issue 'Understanding forest landscape restoration: reinforcing scientific foundations for the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration'.
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页数:13
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