Aboveground tree carbon stocks in West African semi-arid ecosystems: Dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural drivers

The importance of terrestrial ecosystems for carbon sequestration and climate regulation is acknowledged globally. However, the underlying structural drivers are still not well understood, particularly across distinct tropical forest ecosystems where trees species have different growth habits and po...

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Main Authors: Sylvanus Mensah, Florent Noulèkoun, Expédit E. Ago
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-12-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989420308726
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spelling doaj-7dc2b0b3c89142cd8fb678d6da4706df2020-12-31T04:42:39ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942020-12-0124e01331Aboveground tree carbon stocks in West African semi-arid ecosystems: Dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural driversSylvanus Mensah0Florent Noulèkoun1Expédit E. Ago2Laboratoire de Biomathématiques et d’Estimations Forestières, Université d’Abomey Calavi, Cotonou, Benin; Corresponding author.,Department of Environmental Science and Ecological Engineering, Korea University, 145 Anamro, Seongbukgu, Seoul, 02841, South KoreaLaboratoire d’Ecologie Appliquée, Université d’Abomey Calavi, Cotonou, Benin; Biodiversité et Paysage, Université de Liège, Gembloux Agro Bio Tech, 27, avenue Maréchal Juin, 5030, Gembloux, BelgiumThe importance of terrestrial ecosystems for carbon sequestration and climate regulation is acknowledged globally. However, the underlying structural drivers are still not well understood, particularly across distinct tropical forest ecosystems where trees species have different growth habits and potential to reach different maximal size. In particular, how important are different tree size classes in contributing to stand aboveground carbon (AGC) remains unclear across forest ecosystems. Here, we hypothesized that (i) tree size classes would contribute differently to stand AGC across forest ecosystems; and (ii) few species, possibly dominant, would determine most of stand AGC. We tested these hypotheses using a 17-ha sampled inventory data from gallery forests, woodlands and savannahs in the Republic of Benin. We examined (i) how AGC stocks vary among small- (<20 cm), medium- (20–40 cm) and large-size (>40 cm diameter at breast height - dbh) trees; (ii) how the large size class and its individual species contribute to AGC; and (iii) how size class-based taxonomic and structural variables influence AGC?Stand AGC was 23 ± 5, 30 ± 8 and 42 ± 12 MgC ha−1 in savannah, woodland and gallery forest, respectively. There were significant main and interaction effects of vegetation types and size classes. As expected, medium and large-size classes contained more of the AGC, irrespective of the vegetation type. However, gallery forests had the lowest AGC in the <20 cm dbh class, but higher values in medium- and large-size classes as compared to woodlands and savannahs. The top 10 species contributed 82%, 89% and 91% of AGC in gallery forests, woodlands and savannahs, respectively. In addition, five of the top 10 dominant species were shared by the three vegetation types and alone contributed 70–76% of AGC. Tree basal area was the most constant structural attribute influencing AGC; however, its influence shifted with vegetation type and size class, with greater effects of large-size tree basal area in gallery forests, and of medium trees and small trees’ basal area in woodlands and savannahs, respectively. The study shows that (i) AGC allocation to size class varied across vegetation types, and (ii) small and medium trees are also important in predicting AGC, especially in semi-arid environments dominated by high densities of small-size trees (e.g. woodlands and savannahs). It also highlights the importance of few dominant species in contributing a large proportion of AGC stocks. The conservation of these dominant species is essential to avoid substantial decline of AGC stock.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989420308726BeninTree biomassDominant speciesLarge-size treesSavannahStand structure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sylvanus Mensah
Florent Noulèkoun
Expédit E. Ago
spellingShingle Sylvanus Mensah
Florent Noulèkoun
Expédit E. Ago
Aboveground tree carbon stocks in West African semi-arid ecosystems: Dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural drivers
Global Ecology and Conservation
Benin
Tree biomass
Dominant species
Large-size trees
Savannah
Stand structure
author_facet Sylvanus Mensah
Florent Noulèkoun
Expédit E. Ago
author_sort Sylvanus Mensah
title Aboveground tree carbon stocks in West African semi-arid ecosystems: Dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural drivers
title_short Aboveground tree carbon stocks in West African semi-arid ecosystems: Dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural drivers
title_full Aboveground tree carbon stocks in West African semi-arid ecosystems: Dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural drivers
title_fullStr Aboveground tree carbon stocks in West African semi-arid ecosystems: Dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural drivers
title_full_unstemmed Aboveground tree carbon stocks in West African semi-arid ecosystems: Dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural drivers
title_sort aboveground tree carbon stocks in west african semi-arid ecosystems: dominance patterns, size class allocation and structural drivers
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The importance of terrestrial ecosystems for carbon sequestration and climate regulation is acknowledged globally. However, the underlying structural drivers are still not well understood, particularly across distinct tropical forest ecosystems where trees species have different growth habits and potential to reach different maximal size. In particular, how important are different tree size classes in contributing to stand aboveground carbon (AGC) remains unclear across forest ecosystems. Here, we hypothesized that (i) tree size classes would contribute differently to stand AGC across forest ecosystems; and (ii) few species, possibly dominant, would determine most of stand AGC. We tested these hypotheses using a 17-ha sampled inventory data from gallery forests, woodlands and savannahs in the Republic of Benin. We examined (i) how AGC stocks vary among small- (<20 cm), medium- (20–40 cm) and large-size (>40 cm diameter at breast height - dbh) trees; (ii) how the large size class and its individual species contribute to AGC; and (iii) how size class-based taxonomic and structural variables influence AGC?Stand AGC was 23 ± 5, 30 ± 8 and 42 ± 12 MgC ha−1 in savannah, woodland and gallery forest, respectively. There were significant main and interaction effects of vegetation types and size classes. As expected, medium and large-size classes contained more of the AGC, irrespective of the vegetation type. However, gallery forests had the lowest AGC in the <20 cm dbh class, but higher values in medium- and large-size classes as compared to woodlands and savannahs. The top 10 species contributed 82%, 89% and 91% of AGC in gallery forests, woodlands and savannahs, respectively. In addition, five of the top 10 dominant species were shared by the three vegetation types and alone contributed 70–76% of AGC. Tree basal area was the most constant structural attribute influencing AGC; however, its influence shifted with vegetation type and size class, with greater effects of large-size tree basal area in gallery forests, and of medium trees and small trees’ basal area in woodlands and savannahs, respectively. The study shows that (i) AGC allocation to size class varied across vegetation types, and (ii) small and medium trees are also important in predicting AGC, especially in semi-arid environments dominated by high densities of small-size trees (e.g. woodlands and savannahs). It also highlights the importance of few dominant species in contributing a large proportion of AGC stocks. The conservation of these dominant species is essential to avoid substantial decline of AGC stock.
topic Benin
Tree biomass
Dominant species
Large-size trees
Savannah
Stand structure
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989420308726
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