Woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of Jimma Ganati District, Western Ethiopia

We investigated the impact of land use types and topographical variables on the diversity of wood species and their carbon stocks in the studied agroecosystems. A generic allometric equation developed for woody plants in agricultural landscapes was used to estimate the carbon stock. We used a mixed-...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tibebu Enkossa, Sileshi Nemomissa, Debissa Lemessa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-12-01
Series:Environmental Challenges
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010023000847
_version_ 1797388707043475456
author Tibebu Enkossa
Sileshi Nemomissa
Debissa Lemessa
author_facet Tibebu Enkossa
Sileshi Nemomissa
Debissa Lemessa
author_sort Tibebu Enkossa
collection DOAJ
description We investigated the impact of land use types and topographical variables on the diversity of wood species and their carbon stocks in the studied agroecosystems. A generic allometric equation developed for woody plants in agricultural landscapes was used to estimate the carbon stock. We used a mixed-effects linear model using the lmer function in the lme4 package to test the effects of land use types and topographic variables on wood species diversity (Shannon diversity) and stem carbon stock potential. Our study result showed that there is significantly higher woody diversity (P < 0.05) in forests, home gardens and riverine than in grazing lands and croplands. Conversely, woody DBH (cm) and height (m) are relatively higher for croplands followed by grazing land, but lower for home garden and forest land use. There is a statistically significant difference between land use types in their carbon stock (χ² (4) = 18.164, p=0.0011), with forest having the highest total carbon stock, followed by home gardens, but grazing land having the relatively lower total carbon stock of woody species. The study finds that species diversity has a positive and significant (P<0.05) effect on both aboveground and belowground carbon stocks. However, its effect is modulated by land use types, where it is stronger in forest patches, but weaker in more disturbed land use types (e.g., grazing lands and cropland). The study also finds that topographical variables (elevation, slope, and aspects) have no significant (P>0.05) effect on aboveground and belowground carbon stock. The tree species' structural attributes such as height, DBH size, and basal area (BA) have a positive and statistically significant (P < 0.05) effect on carbon stock. The study also found that only a few high DBH class (old growth) tree individuals that are deliberately spared in cropland and grazing land matrix have a high carbon stock contribution. For example, seven species, Podocarpus falcatus, Ficus vasta, Prunus africana, Schefflera abyssinica, Ficus sur, Ekebergia capensis, and Apodytes dimidiate, contribute an estimated 70% of the estimated total carbon stock in the landscapes. These results indicate the need to protect such scattered old-trees in agricultural landscapes both for biodiversity conservation and carbon sequestration thereby integrating climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies into subsistence farming systems.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T22:44:42Z
format Article
id doaj.art-d3c274d13e5143d69585e21f0f794d87
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2667-0100
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T22:44:42Z
publishDate 2023-12-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Environmental Challenges
spelling doaj.art-d3c274d13e5143d69585e21f0f794d872023-12-17T06:42:33ZengElsevierEnvironmental Challenges2667-01002023-12-0113100761Woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of Jimma Ganati District, Western EthiopiaTibebu Enkossa0Sileshi Nemomissa1Debissa Lemessa2Department of Plant Biology and Biodiversity Management, College of Natural and Computational Sciences, Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia; Department of Plant Science, College of Agriculture, Wollega University, Ethiopia; Corresponding author at: Department of Plant Biology and Biodiversity Management, College of Natural and Computational Sciences, Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia.Department of Plant Biology and Biodiversity Management, College of Natural and Computational Sciences, Addis Ababa University, EthiopiaDepartment of Plant Biology and Biodiversity Management, College of Natural and Computational Sciences, Addis Ababa University, EthiopiaWe investigated the impact of land use types and topographical variables on the diversity of wood species and their carbon stocks in the studied agroecosystems. A generic allometric equation developed for woody plants in agricultural landscapes was used to estimate the carbon stock. We used a mixed-effects linear model using the lmer function in the lme4 package to test the effects of land use types and topographic variables on wood species diversity (Shannon diversity) and stem carbon stock potential. Our study result showed that there is significantly higher woody diversity (P < 0.05) in forests, home gardens and riverine than in grazing lands and croplands. Conversely, woody DBH (cm) and height (m) are relatively higher for croplands followed by grazing land, but lower for home garden and forest land use. There is a statistically significant difference between land use types in their carbon stock (χ² (4) = 18.164, p=0.0011), with forest having the highest total carbon stock, followed by home gardens, but grazing land having the relatively lower total carbon stock of woody species. The study finds that species diversity has a positive and significant (P<0.05) effect on both aboveground and belowground carbon stocks. However, its effect is modulated by land use types, where it is stronger in forest patches, but weaker in more disturbed land use types (e.g., grazing lands and cropland). The study also finds that topographical variables (elevation, slope, and aspects) have no significant (P>0.05) effect on aboveground and belowground carbon stock. The tree species' structural attributes such as height, DBH size, and basal area (BA) have a positive and statistically significant (P < 0.05) effect on carbon stock. The study also found that only a few high DBH class (old growth) tree individuals that are deliberately spared in cropland and grazing land matrix have a high carbon stock contribution. For example, seven species, Podocarpus falcatus, Ficus vasta, Prunus africana, Schefflera abyssinica, Ficus sur, Ekebergia capensis, and Apodytes dimidiate, contribute an estimated 70% of the estimated total carbon stock in the landscapes. These results indicate the need to protect such scattered old-trees in agricultural landscapes both for biodiversity conservation and carbon sequestration thereby integrating climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies into subsistence farming systems.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010023000847Agricultural landscapeLand use typesCarbon stockWoody diversity
spellingShingle Tibebu Enkossa
Sileshi Nemomissa
Debissa Lemessa
Woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of Jimma Ganati District, Western Ethiopia
Environmental Challenges
Agricultural landscape
Land use types
Carbon stock
Woody diversity
title Woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of Jimma Ganati District, Western Ethiopia
title_full Woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of Jimma Ganati District, Western Ethiopia
title_fullStr Woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of Jimma Ganati District, Western Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of Jimma Ganati District, Western Ethiopia
title_short Woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of Jimma Ganati District, Western Ethiopia
title_sort woody species diversity and the carbon stock potentials of different land use types in agroecosystem of jimma ganati district western ethiopia
topic Agricultural landscape
Land use types
Carbon stock
Woody diversity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010023000847
work_keys_str_mv AT tibebuenkossa woodyspeciesdiversityandthecarbonstockpotentialsofdifferentlandusetypesinagroecosystemofjimmaganatidistrictwesternethiopia
AT sileshinemomissa woodyspeciesdiversityandthecarbonstockpotentialsofdifferentlandusetypesinagroecosystemofjimmaganatidistrictwesternethiopia
AT debissalemessa woodyspeciesdiversityandthecarbonstockpotentialsofdifferentlandusetypesinagroecosystemofjimmaganatidistrictwesternethiopia