Journal ArticleParallel publicationPublished version DOI: 10.48548/pubdata-1427

Land use intensification causes the spatial contraction of woody-plant based ecosystem services in southwestern Ethiopia

Chronological data

Date of first publication2024-05-17
Date of publication in PubData 2024-11-07

Language of the resource

English

Related external resources

Variant form of DOI: 10.1038/s43247-024-01435-2
Duguma, D. W., Law, E., Shumi, G., Schultner, J., Abson, D. J., Fischer, J. (2024). Land use intensification causes the spatial contraction of woody-plant based ecosystem services in southwestern Ethiopia. Communications Earth and Environment, 5(1), Article 263.
Published in ISSN: 2662-4435
Communications Earth and Environment

Abstract

Integrating biodiversity conservation and food production is vital, particularly in the tropics where many landscapes are highly biodiverse, and where people directly depend on local ecosystems services that are linked to woody vegetation. Thus, it is important to understand how woody vegetation and the benefits associated with it could change under different land-use scenarios. Using a comprehensive, interdisciplinary study in southwestern Ethiopia, we modeled current and future availability of woody plant-based ecosystem services under four scenarios of landscape change. Land-use scenarios with intensified food or cash crop cultivation would lead to the contraction of woody-plant based ecosystem services from farmland to forest patches, increasing pressure on remaining forest patches. This raises questions about the viability of conventional intensification combined with land sparing—where conservation and production are separated—as a viable strategy for conservation in tropical landscapes where woody-plant based ecosystem services are vital to the lives of local communities.

Keywords

Ecosystem; Service Provision; Community Composition; Food Production; Species; Biodiversity; Woody Plants; Ethiopia

Faculty / department

Notes

This publication was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG).

More information

DDC

Creation Context

Research