Characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. An application to a South West Pacific tropical and semi-arid island (New Caledonia)

New Caledonia is a tropical semi-arid archipelago in the Southwest Pacific. It is a hotspot of threatened biodiversity. Almost entirely covered in forest before human settlement, the mountainous main island, ''Grande-Terre'', has been subject to fire and mine related deforestatio...

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Main Authors: Brice van Haaren, Rémi Andreoli, Pascal Dumas, Didier Lille, Hubert Géraux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-08-01
Series:Environmental Challenges
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266701002100130X
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spelling doaj-cd4e04ce9f3d4751a549eb1952f23b222021-07-27T04:09:42ZengElsevierEnvironmental Challenges2667-01002021-08-014100151Characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. An application to a South West Pacific tropical and semi-arid island (New Caledonia)Brice van Haaren0Rémi Andreoli1Pascal Dumas2Didier Lille3Hubert Géraux4WWF France, 35-37 Rue Baudin, Le Pré-Saint-Gervais 93310, France; Corresponding author.BLUECHAM SAS, 101 Promenade Roger Laroque BPA5, Nouméa 98800, New CaledoniaInstitut de Sciences Exactes et Appliquées (ISEA), University of New Caledonia, BP R4, Avenue James Cook, Nouméa 98 851, New CaledoniaBLUECHAM SAS, 101 Promenade Roger Laroque BPA5, Nouméa 98800, New CaledoniaWWF France, 35-37 Rue Baudin, Le Pré-Saint-Gervais 93310, FranceNew Caledonia is a tropical semi-arid archipelago in the Southwest Pacific. It is a hotspot of threatened biodiversity. Almost entirely covered in forest before human settlement, the mountainous main island, ''Grande-Terre'', has been subject to fire and mine related deforestation since the 19th century. The degradation of the forest has led to loss of the following ecosystem services: soil stabilization, resilience to anthropogenic pressure, and water buffering. In this study, we quantified the loss of these services through remote sensing, modeling and a statistical approach within water catchment perimeters. The main result is a synthetic geographical database of the water catchment perimeters indicating for each the loss of functions as regards the forest's ecosystem services. In the main island, we found that 54% of the water catchment perimeters were highly degraded, 38% were degraded and only 8% slightly degraded. On this basis, our findings have been presented to public bodies and decision makers in order to raise awareness and to encourage the implementation of appropriate forest management measures.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266701002100130XEcosystem servicesWater catchmentTropical forestErosionFireMining activity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brice van Haaren
Rémi Andreoli
Pascal Dumas
Didier Lille
Hubert Géraux
spellingShingle Brice van Haaren
Rémi Andreoli
Pascal Dumas
Didier Lille
Hubert Géraux
Characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. An application to a South West Pacific tropical and semi-arid island (New Caledonia)
Environmental Challenges
Ecosystem services
Water catchment
Tropical forest
Erosion
Fire
Mining activity
author_facet Brice van Haaren
Rémi Andreoli
Pascal Dumas
Didier Lille
Hubert Géraux
author_sort Brice van Haaren
title Characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. An application to a South West Pacific tropical and semi-arid island (New Caledonia)
title_short Characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. An application to a South West Pacific tropical and semi-arid island (New Caledonia)
title_full Characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. An application to a South West Pacific tropical and semi-arid island (New Caledonia)
title_fullStr Characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. An application to a South West Pacific tropical and semi-arid island (New Caledonia)
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. An application to a South West Pacific tropical and semi-arid island (New Caledonia)
title_sort characterizing forest ecosystem services degradation within water catchments. an application to a south west pacific tropical and semi-arid island (new caledonia)
publisher Elsevier
series Environmental Challenges
issn 2667-0100
publishDate 2021-08-01
description New Caledonia is a tropical semi-arid archipelago in the Southwest Pacific. It is a hotspot of threatened biodiversity. Almost entirely covered in forest before human settlement, the mountainous main island, ''Grande-Terre'', has been subject to fire and mine related deforestation since the 19th century. The degradation of the forest has led to loss of the following ecosystem services: soil stabilization, resilience to anthropogenic pressure, and water buffering. In this study, we quantified the loss of these services through remote sensing, modeling and a statistical approach within water catchment perimeters. The main result is a synthetic geographical database of the water catchment perimeters indicating for each the loss of functions as regards the forest's ecosystem services. In the main island, we found that 54% of the water catchment perimeters were highly degraded, 38% were degraded and only 8% slightly degraded. On this basis, our findings have been presented to public bodies and decision makers in order to raise awareness and to encourage the implementation of appropriate forest management measures.
topic Ecosystem services
Water catchment
Tropical forest
Erosion
Fire
Mining activity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266701002100130X
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