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PROMISE Work Package 2100 Impact of Land-Use Changes on Future Monsoon Climates. The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 – 2050 Dermot O’Regan CEH Wallingford. Study Objectives. WP2100
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PROMISEWork Package 2100Impact of Land-Use Changes on Future Monsoon Climates The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 – 2050 Dermot O’Regan CEH Wallingford The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Study Objectives WP2100 To use global and/or regional control and scenario integrations to address the impact of land use changes (e.g. deforestation) on monsoon climates. The sensitivity of the results to the representation of hydrological and land-surface processes will be investigated. CEH Wallingford Scenarios for land cover change from 1960-2050 will be generated for sub-Saharan Africa based on simple assumptions about population growth, land use practice, and current rates of deforestation. Gridded changes in generic vegetation classes (forest, cropland, pasture etc.) will be converted to changes in land surface parameters which can be applied consistently in different GCMs. Comparison between modelled responses will be used to aid in the identification of common mechanisms and model short-comings. The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Presentation Outline 1. The Problem: Data and Understanding - highlight the problems of obtaining reliable estimates of land cover and land cover change essential for global change monitoring 2. Study Method - present the methodology and some results of this part of WP2100 The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Data and Understanding • Land Cover & Land Use • Reliable, comprehensive and timely information on global land cover and land use is essential in the context of global change research (DeFries and Townsend 1994) • Land Cover & Land Use Change • Understanding the dynamics of land-use and land-cover has increasingly been recognised as one of the key research imperatives in global environmental change research (Lambin 2001) The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Figure 1: A comparison of estimates of extent of ten cover types derived from three existing ground-based datasets of global land cover (from DeFries & Townshend 1994) The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Study Method • collate data relating to ‘present’ land cover and deforestation rates in the study region • identify the area of each land cover type, by country, both in terms of actual hectarage and as a percentage of total (national) land area • generate scenarios of past and future land cover in the region • map land cover classes into GCM functional types – tree, shrub, grass, bare soil - for use in different GCMs • make data available for integration with meteorological and hydrological components of CEH work The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Study Region: Tropical Africa West Africa (16) Senegal Gambia Guinea Bissau Guinea Sierra Leone Liberia Ivory Coast Ghana Togo Benin Nigeria Chad Niger Burkina Faso Mali Mauritania Central Africa (6) D.R.C. Congo Gabon Eq. Guinea Cameroon C.A.R. The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
FAO FAOSTAT Global Forest Resources Assessment (FRA1990, FRA2000) World Forestry Inventory (1953, 1958, 1963) UNEP Environmental Data Report (1987 - biennial) World Bank World Development Report (1977 – annual) World Resources Institute (WRI) World Resources (1984-biennial) Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) World Factbook (1962-2001) USGS Global Land Cover Characteristics Database (IGBP Land Cover Classification) Global Land Cover Data Sources The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Varying Estimates of Land Cover Problems with land cover and land cover change estimation: - definitions of land cover types - reliable and consistent observation and inventory - inaccessibility (ground or satellite based methods) - remote sensing classification The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
FAOGlobal Forest Resources Assessment 2000(FRA2000) 1990 Land Cover Estimates The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
FAOGlobal Forest Resources Assessment 2000(FRA2000) The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Scenarios of Land Cover Change • Using the FRA 2000 baseline data, scenarios of land cover were generated for 1961, 2025 and 2050 based on FRA 2000 land cover classification • the change in forest extent was estimated for each country in the region (increase back to 1960s, decrease into 21st century) • For the ‘1961’ scenario forest extent was altered according to land cover change estimates from the Environmental Data Report 1991/92(UNEP) covering the period 1966 – 1988 • Future forest cover scenarios were generated based on two models, and applied to the years 2025 and 2050. A ‘BAU’ (business-as-usual) model gives forest cover estimates based on the scenario of a continuation of current rates of deforestation, as determined by FRA 2000 • A ‘population growth’ model generated an alternative future forest cover scenario whereby annual deforestation rates (1990-2025 and 2025-2050) are based on a relationship between population density and cumulative forest loss as published by Pahari and Murai (1999) The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Scenarios of Land Cover Change Forest Loss 1960 - 2050 The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Scenarios of Land Cover Change • The extent of land cover within the other two classes was then increased, or decreased, accordingly. A partition of 40% “other wooded land” and 60% “other land” was applied, based on the proximate causes and specific agricultural practices causing deforestation in tropical Africa as assessed by Geist and Lambin (2001). The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Scenarios of Land Cover Change Land Cover Change 1960-2050 The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Mapping Land Cover Classes to GCM Functional Types Following expert guidance, FRA2000 land cover classes were converted to functional types – tree, shrub, grass, bare soil - for application in different GCMs The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050
Conclusions • Reliable, consistent, and timely data on the dynamics of land cover and land use are an essential component in global change research • Currently, estimates of land cover vary greatly and the understanding of the drivers of land use change remains a key issue • For this study scenarios for land cover change from 1960 -2050 were generated for a study region of tropical Africa based on simple assumptions about population growth, land use practice, and current rates of deforestation • Will results show that climate and hydrological models are sensitive to the estimated changes in land cover and land use presented? The development of realistic scenarios of land cover change in tropical Africa for the period 1960 - 2050