19/12/11

Climate change killing trees across the Sahel, says study

Trees in the Sahel are disappearing fast Copyright: Flickr/Marco Bellucci

Send to a friend

The details you provide on this page will not be used to send unsolicited email, and will not be sold to a 3rd party. See privacy policy.

Trees throughout Africa’s Sahel region — vital to peoples’ livelihoods — are dying as a result of long-term drought linked to climate change, according to a study.

It found that one in six trees in the region has died since the 1950s, whilst a fifth of species has disappeared locally, because of rising temperatures and lower rainfall linked to climate change.

At some sites, average temperatures rose by 0.8 degrees Celsius and rainfall decreased by 48 per cent. Trees have shifted southward towards wetter areas.

This shift in the vegetation zones could have a severe impact on the lives of the Sahel’s population warned Patrick Gonzalez, a climate change scientist from the University of California, Berkeley, in the United States, and lead author of the study, published online in the Journal of Arid Environments last week (17 December).

"People in the Sahel depend on trees for maintaining soil fertility and for firewood, hut poles, food and other essentials of life … so the loss of trees directly harms people’s livelihoods," he told SciDev.Net.

The researchers combined aerial photographs captured between 1954 and 1989, field data from 2000–2002 relating to tree size and numbers and high-resolution satellite images from 2002 to show how tree distribution has changed across the region. Statistical analysis that compared this information with factors such as temperature, rainfall, human population and soil fertility showed that climate outweighed all other factors in driving this change, said Gonzalez.

Farmers in the region are already being forced to alter their techniques in response to changing climate. Many already practise natural regeneration — where they select, prune, and raise small trees to maturity in their fields ­— as an adaptation to climate change.

The study was partially funded by NASA (the National Aeronautics and Space Administration) and the US Geological Survey.

Link to abstract in Journal of Arid Environments

This article was modified 23 December 2011.

References

Journal of Arid Environments doi:10.1016/j.jaridenv.2011.11.001 (2011)