Houphouet Aya Diane Larissa, Sangne Yao Charles, Diarrassouba Abdoulaye, Adou Yao Constant Yves, Betbeder Julie, Hérault Bruno. 2025. Forest structure recovery around West Africa's last great rainforest: Modelling complex dynamics in Taï national park. Trees, Forests and People, 22:101005, 12 p.
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Url - jeu de données - Entrepôt autre : https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17091840
Résumé : Tropical secondary forests play a key role in restoring biodiversity and biomass, yet their recovery dynamics remain poorly understood in West Africa, even within protected areas. In Taï National Park, one of the region's last major rainforests, we modelled forest recovery trajectories in the past agricultural areas to better understand and support effective conservation strategies. We inventoried 118 plots spanning old-growth undisturbed, old-growth disturbed, and secondary forests. Four structural attributes (aboveground biomass, Lorey's height, quadratic mean diameter, and structural homogeneity) were modelled using a Bayesian framework. We assessed the influence of past land use, disturbance, and environmental factors on recovery rates. Structural attributes recovered at markedly different rates. Structural homogeneity and mean diameter recovered fastest (∼20–30 years), followed by height (∼30–40 years), while biomass required over a century for near-complete recovery. Recovery was strongly enhanced by the presence of remnant trees and forest connectivity, especially for biomass. In contrast, Marantaceae presence, hydromorphic soils, anthropogenic disturbance, and herbivory slowed recovery. Former cocoa fields showed the highest recovery rates across all attributes, while former gold mining sites exhibited extremely slow regeneration due to severe soil degradation. Our results suggest that forest recovery around Taï National Park will be highly heterogeneous. Cocoa fields with remnant trees offer strong potential for rapid passive recovery, while mined areas may need active restoration. Protecting remnant trees and managing disturbances will be crucial. Overall, passive regeneration holds significant promise, but realistic expectations and adaptive management are essential to support long-term forest resilience in this landscape.
Mots-clés Agrovoc : forêt tropicale humide, biomasse, forêt secondaire, forêt tropicale, biodiversité forestière, inventaire forestier, parc national, déboisement, reconstitution forestière, régénération naturelle, Theobroma cacao, forêt, modélisation environnementale
Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : Côte d'Ivoire, Afrique occidentale
Mots-clés libres : Secondary forest recovery, Bayesian modelling, Forest structure, Passive restoration, Remnant trees, Land-use legacy, Taï national park
Agences de financement hors UE : Fonds Français pour l'Environnement Mondial, Agence Française de Développement
Projets sur financement : (CIV) Vers des pratiques de gestion durable du carbone organique des sols en Côte d’Ivoire
Auteurs et affiliations
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Houphouet Aya Diane Larissa, CIRAD-ES-UPR Forêts et sociétés (FRA)
ORCID: 0009-0002-4444-1943 - auteur correspondant
- Sangne Yao Charles, UJLG (CIV)
- Diarrassouba Abdoulaye, OIPR (CIV)
- Adou Yao Constant Yves, UFHB (CIV)
- Betbeder Julie, CIRAD-ES-UPR Forêts et sociétés (FRA)
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Hérault Bruno, CIRAD-ES-UPR Forêts et sociétés (FRA)
ORCID: 0000-0002-6950-7286 - auteur correspondant
Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/614749/)
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