Two decades of land cover change and forest fragmentation in Liberia: Consequences for the contribution of nature to people

Author:

de Sousa Celio12ORCID,Fatoyinbo Lola2ORCID,Honzák Miroslav3,Wright Timothy Max3,Murillo Sandoval Paulo Jose4ORCID,Whapoe Zargou Elijah5,Yonmah Jerry6,Olatunji Emmanuel Temitope7,Garteh Jerry8,Stovall Atticus9ORCID,Neigh Christopher S. R.2ORCID,Portela Rosimeiry3,Gaddis Keith D.10ORCID,Larsen Trond3,Juhn Daniel3

Affiliation:

1. Goddard Earth Sciences Technology and Research (GESTAR) II University of Maryland, Baltimore County Baltimore Maryland USA

2. Biospheric Sciences Laboratory, Code 618 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt Maryland 20771 USA

3. Betty and Gordon Moore Center for Science Conservation International Arlington Virginia 22202 USA

4. Facultad de Ciencias del Hábitat, Diseño e Infraestructura, Departamento de Topografía Universidad del Tolima Ibague Colombia

5. Planning and Policy Environmental Protection Agency of Liberia Monrovia Liberia

6. Liberia Forest Sector Project The World Bank Monrovia Liberia

7. School of Environmental Studies and Climate Change University of Liberia Monrovia Liberia

8. Program Department Society for Conservation of Nature of Liberia Monrovia Liberia

9. Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC) University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA

10. Headquarters National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington District of Columbia 20546 USA

Abstract

AbstractThe Guinean forests of West Africa have been identified as a global biodiversity hotspot due to its exceptional concentrations of endemic species and exceptional loss of habitats. The majority of what remains of the Guinean forests lies within Liberia, a country whose share of total wealth is nearly equally distributed into human and natural capital. The Liberian government seeks a more inclusive development agenda that forges a path for improved human capital while sustainably managing its natural capital wealth, which requires consistent data on land cover change and forest disturbance over time. To address this need, Landsat data were used to map and quantify land cover change and forest fragmentation in Liberia between 2000 and 2018. In addition, LiDAR data from the Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) mission were applied to assess the integrity of forest remnants. Between 2000 and 2018, only 1% of all forest cover classes (i.e., dense/primary, open/secondary and sparse/degraded) were converted into non‐forest classes, with the most observed change being between these three forest classes. During the study period, 27% of the dense/primary forest class transitioned to either the open/secondary or sparse/degraded canopy classes through consistent fragmentation along the edges of the last large remaining blocks of dense/primary forest located in the north‐west and south‐east of Liberia and more than 14% of dense/primary forest areas identified in previous studies as “essential natural capital” for either biodiversity, forest carbon storage or provision of freshwater ecosystem services were degraded. The 2018 GEDI‐based measurements show that the overall average height of dense/primary forest decreases by 24% and 48%, and canopy closure decreases by 33% and 59%, when transitioned to the open/secondary and sparse/degraded classes, respectively. The information derived from this analysis will be critical for informing the development of new policies and actions, leading to more sustainable forest management in Liberia.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

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