Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
87914 | Forest Ecology and Management | 2007 | 12 Pages |
Madagascar is currently developing a policy and strategies to enhance the sustainable management of its natural resources, encouraged by United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and REDD. To set up a sustainable financing scheme methodologies have to be provided that estimate, prevent and mitigate leakage, develop national and regional baselines, and estimate carbon benefits. With this research study this challenge was tried to be addressed by analysing a lowland rainforest in the Analanjirofo region in the district of Soanierana Ivongo, North East of Madagascar. For two distinguished forest degradation stages: “low degraded forest” and “degraded forest” aboveground biomass and carbon stock was assessed. The corresponding rates of carbon within those two classes were calculated and linked to a multi-temporal set of SPOT satellite data acquired in 1991, 2004 and 2009. Deforestation and particularly degradation and the related carbon stock developments were analysed. With the assessed data for the 3 years 1991, 2004 and 2009 it was possible to model a baseline and to develop a forest prediction for 2020 for Analanjirofo region in the district of Soanierana Ivongo. These results, developed applying robust methods, may provide important spatial information regarding the priorities in planning and implementation of future REDD+ activities in the area.
► We assess aboveground biomass and carbon stored in a lowland rainforest in Madagascar. ► We monitor deforestation and degradation developments since 1991. ► Degraded forest has increased from 40% to 64% at the expense of low degraded forest. ► A carbon loss of 142,385 Tg (72%) has occurred since 1991. ► A regional baseline was developed for lowland rainforest in Analanjirofo region, Madagascar.