Miombo woodlands cover ~ 2.7 million km2 of central and southern Africa between dry (650 mm mean annual rainfall) and moist miombo (1400 mm) and are currently threatened by land use and land cover changes that have intensified over the last 50 years. Despite the miombo’s global significance for carbon (C) storage and sequestration, there has been no regional synthesis that maps carbon stocks and changes in the woodlands. This information is crucial to inform further research for the development of appropriate policies and management strategies to maintain and increase C stocks and sequestration capacity, for conservation and sustainable management. We assembled a systematic map to determine what evidence exists for (1) changes in carbon stocks in miombo woodlands over the period 1960–2015; (2) differences in carbon density in miombo with different conservation status; (3) trends in carbon stock recovery following human disturbance; and (4) fire management impacts on carbon stocks and dynamics.
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DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13750-018-0128-0Altmetric score:
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Source
Environmental Evidence 7(1): 16
Publication year
2018
ISSN
2047-2382
Authors
Gumbo, D.; Clendenning, J.; Martius, C.; Moombe, K.B.; Grundy, I.; Nasi, R.; Mumba, K.Y.; Ribeiro, N.; Kabwe, G.; Petrokofsky, G.