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    <title>OPUS 4 Latest Documents RSS Feed</title>
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    <link>http://publikationen.stub.uni-frankfurt.de/index/index/</link>
    <pubDate>Wed, 11 Jan 2012 12:58:02 +0100</pubDate>
    <lastBuildDate>Wed, 11 Jan 2012 12:58:02 +0100</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>Modelling the impact of future climate and land use change on vegetation patterns, plant diversity and provisioning ecosystem services in West Africa</title>
      <link>http://publikationen.stub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/26623</link>
      <description>Global climate change and land use change will not only alter entire ecosystems and&#13;
biodiversity patterns, but also the supply of ecosystem services. A better understanding&#13;
of the consequences is particularly needed in under-investigated regions, such as West&#13;
Africa. The projected environmental changes suggest negative impacts on nature, thus&#13;
representing a threat to the human well-being. However, many effects caused by climate&#13;
and land use change are poorly understood so far.&#13;
Thus, the main objective of this thesis was to investigate the impact of climate and&#13;
land use change on vegetation patterns, plant diversity and important provisioning&#13;
ecosystem services in West Africa. The three different aspects are separately explored&#13;
and build the chapters of this thesis. The findings help to improve our understanding of&#13;
the effects of environmental change on ecosystems and human well-being.&#13;
In the first study, the main objectives were to model trends and the extent of&#13;
future biome shifts in West Africa that may occur by 2050. Also, I modelled a trend in&#13;
West African tree cover change, while accounting for human impact. Additionally,&#13;
uncertainty in future climate projections was evaluated to identify regions with reliable&#13;
trends and regions where the impacts remain uncertain. The potential future spatial&#13;
distributions of desert, grassland, savanna, deciduous and evergreen forest were&#13;
modelled in West Africa, using six bioclimatic models. Future tree cover change was&#13;
analysed with generalized additive models (GAMs). I used climate data from 17 general&#13;
circulation models (GCMs) and included human population density and fire intensity to&#13;
model tree cover. Consensus projections were derived via weighted averages to: 1)&#13;
reduce inter-model variability, and 2) describe trends extracted from different GCM&#13;
projections. The strongest predicted effect of climate change was on desert and&#13;
grasslands, where the bioclimatic envelope of grassland is projected to expand into the&#13;
Sahara desert by an area of 2 million km2. While savannas are predicted to contract in the&#13;
south (by 54 ± 22 × 104 km2), deciduous and evergreen forest biomes are expected to&#13;
expand (64 ± 13 × 104 km2 and 77 ± 26 × 104 km2). However, uncertainty due to different&#13;
GCMs was particularly high for the grassland and the evergreen forest biome shift.&#13;
Increasing tree cover (1–10%) was projected for large parts of Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana and Togo, but a decrease was projected for coastal areas (1–20%).&#13;
Furthermore, human impact negatively affected tree cover and partly changed the&#13;
direction of the projected climate-driven tendency from increase to decrease.&#13;
Considering climate change alone, the model results of potential vegetation (biomes)&#13;
showed a ‘greening’ trend by 2050. However, the modelled effects of human impact&#13;
suggest future forest degradation. Thus, it is essential to consider both climate change&#13;
and human impact in order to generate realistic future projections on woody cover.&#13;
The second study focused on the impact and the interplay of future (2050) climate&#13;
and land use change on the plant diversity of the West African country Burkina Faso.&#13;
Synergistic forecasts for this country are lacking to date. Burkina Faso covers a broad&#13;
bioclimatic gradient which causes a similar gradient in plant diversity. Thus, the impact of&#13;
climate and land use change can be investigated in regions with different levels of species&#13;
richness. The LandSHIFT model from the Centre of Environmental System research CESR&#13;
(Kassel, Germany) was adapted for this study to derive novel regional, spatially explicit&#13;
future (2050) land use simulations for Burkina Faso. Additionally, the simulations include&#13;
different assumptions on the technological developments in the agricultural sector. Oneclass&#13;
support vector machines (SVMs), a machine learning method, were performed with&#13;
these land use simulations together with current and future (2050) climate projections at&#13;
a 0.1° resolution (cell: ~ 10 × 10 km). The modelling results showed that the flora of&#13;
Burkina Faso will be primarily negatively impacted by future climate and land use&#13;
changes. The species richness will be significantly reduced by 2050 (P &lt; 0.001, paired&#13;
Wilcoxon signed-rank test). However, contrasting latitudinal patterns were found.&#13;
Although climate change is predicted to cause species loss in the more humid regions in&#13;
Southern Burkina Faso (~ 200 species per cell), the model projects an increase of species&#13;
richness in the Sahel. However, land use change is expected to suppress this increase to&#13;
the current species diversity level, depending on the technological developments. Climate&#13;
change is a more important threat to the plant diversity than land use change under the&#13;
assumption of technological stagnation in the agricultural sector.&#13;
Overall, the study highlights the impact and interplay of future climate and land&#13;
use change on plant diversity along a broad bioclimatic gradient in West Africa.&#13;
Furthermore, the results suggest that plant diversity in dry and humid regions of the tropics might generally respond differently to climate and land use change. This pattern&#13;
has not been detected by global studies so far.&#13;
Several of the plant species in West Africa significantly contribute to the&#13;
livelihoods of the population. The plants provide so-called non-timber forest products&#13;
(NTFPs), which are important provisioning ecosystem services. However, these services&#13;
are also threatened by environmental change. Thus, the third study aimed at developing a&#13;
novel approach to assess the impacts of climate and land use change on the economic&#13;
benefits derived from NTFPs. This project was carried out in cooperation with Katja&#13;
Heubach (BiK-F) who provided data on household economics. These data include 60&#13;
interviews that were conducted in Northern Benin on annual quantities and revenues of&#13;
collected NTFPs from the three most important savanna tree species: Adansonia digitata,&#13;
Parkia biglobosa and Vitellaria paradoxa. The current market prices of the NTFPs were&#13;
derived from respective local markets. To assess current and future (2050) occurrence&#13;
probabilities of the three species, I calibrated niche-based models with climate data (from&#13;
Miroc3.2medres) and land use data (LandSHIFT) at a 0.1° resolution (cell: ~ 10 × 10 km).&#13;
Land use simulations were taken from the previous study on plant diversity. Three&#13;
different niche-based models were used: 1) generalized additive models (regression&#13;
method), 2) generalized boosting models (machine learning method), and 3) flexible&#13;
discriminant analysis (classification method). The three model simulations were averaged&#13;
(ensemble forecasting) to increase the robustness of the predictions. To assess future&#13;
economic gains and losses, respectively, the modelled species’ occurrence probabilities&#13;
were linked with the spatially assigned monetary values. Highest current annual benefits&#13;
are obtained from V. paradoxa (54,111 ± 28,126 US$/cell), followed by P. biglobosa&#13;
(32,246 ± 16,526 US$/cell) and A. digitata (9,514 ± 6,243 US$/cell). However, in the&#13;
prediction large areas will lose up to 50% of their current economic value by 2050.&#13;
Vitellaria paradoxa and Parkia biglobosa, which currently reveal the highest economic&#13;
benefits, are heavily affected. Adansonia digitata is negatively affected less strongly by&#13;
environmental change and might regionally even supply increasing economic benefits, in&#13;
particular in the west and east of the investigation area. We conclude that adaptive&#13;
strategies are needed to create alternative income opportunities, in particular for women&#13;
that are responsible for collecting the NTFPs. The findings provide a benchmark for local policy-makers to economically compare different land use options and adjust existing&#13;
management strategies for the near future.&#13;
Overall, this thesis improves our understanding of the impacts of climate and land&#13;
use changes on West African vegetation patterns, plant diversity and provisioning&#13;
ecosystem services. Climate change had spatially varying impacts (positive and negative&#13;
effects) on the vegetation cover and plant diversity, while predominantly negative effects&#13;
resulted from human pressure. Regional contrasting impacts of environmental change&#13;
were also found considering the provisioning ecosystem services.</description>
      <author>Jonathan Heubes</author>
      <category>doctoralthesis</category>
      <guid>http://publikationen.stub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/26623</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 01 Nov 2012 12:58:02 +0100</pubDate>
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