Urban Flora Structure and Carbon Storage Potential of Woody Trees in Different Land Use Units of Cotonou (West Africa)

Author:

Atchadé Assouhan Jonas12ORCID,Kanda Madjouma2,Folega Fousseni2ORCID,Diouf Abdoul Aziz3,Agbahoungba Symphorien4ORCID,Dourma Marra2,Wala Kperkouma2,Akpagana Koffi2

Affiliation:

1. Regional Center of Excellence on Sustainable Cities in Africa (CERViDA-DOUNEDON) of the University of Lomé, Lomé 01 BP 1515, Togo

2. Laboratory of Botany and Plant Ecology (LBEV), Faculty of Science, University of Lomé, Lomé 01 BP 1515, Togo

3. Center de Suivi Ecologique, Fann Résidence, Dakar BP 15532, Senegal

4. Laboratory of Applied Ecology, Faculty of Agronomic Sciences, University of Abomey-Calavi, Cotonou 01 BP 526, Benin

Abstract

Urbanization is a current concern, particularly in Africa, where it is expected to continue and increasingly threaten the effectiveness of plant biodiversity, natural carbon sinks, and the sustainability of cities. This paper investigates the structural parameters and carbon storage potential of trees in the land use units of the city of Cotonou in southern Benin. A total of 149 plots at 2500 m2 each were randomly generated, and trees with a diameter ≥ 10 cm were inventoried. ANOVA revealed that the means of structural parameters (diameter and height classes) and carbon stock rate varied significantly (p < 0.001) across land use units in the city. Tree basal area is estimated at 4.52 ± 5.24 m2 ha−1, with an average of 12.72 (13) feet ha−1. The average diameter of the trees is estimated at 57.94 ± 29.71 cm. Approximately 1000 kg ha−1 (0.94 × 103 kg ha−1) of carbon is stored in the city of Cotonou. Green spaces (1.21 × 103 kg ha−1) and roads (1.19 × 103 kg ha−1) are the units that recorded the highest carbon stocks. Khaya senegalensis, Mangifera indica, and Terminalia mentally lead the top ten species with high stock potential. This study demonstrates the contribution of urban trees to global atmospheric carbon reduction, which varies by species, land use units, and tree density. Future research could investigate an i-Tree Landscape approach for urban carbon estimation. This could reinforce urban carbon data availability for urban ecological planning.

Funder

Regional Centre of Excellence on Sustainable Cities in Africa

Association of African Universities

World Bank Group

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pollution,Urban Studies,Waste Management and Disposal,Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development

Reference52 articles.

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2. United Nations (2023, September 29). World Urbanization Prospects. 2014. Demographic Research. 2023. Available online: https://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/publications/files/wup2014-report.pdf.

3. Gnacadja, L. (2023, September 29). The cities of the Africa we want. Rise Africa, Inspiring Action for Sustainable Cities. In Discussion Series: Africa Is the 21st Century Global Gamechanger and the Role of Our Cities. 2022. Available online: https://riseafrica.iclei.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/The-AfricaWeWant_Luc-Gnacadja_pdf.

4. Institut National de la Statistique et de l’Analyse Economique (INSAE) (2015). Rgph4: Que Retenir des Effectifs de Population en 2013, INSAE.

5. Carbon storages and sequestration potentials in remnant forests of diferent patch sizes in northern Ethiopia: An implication for climate change mitigation;Genete;Agric. Food Secur.,2022

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