4.4 Article

Do carbon stocks and floristic diversity of tropical homegardens vary along an elevational gradient and based on holding size in central Kerala, India?

Journal

AGROFORESTRY SYSTEMS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10457-023-00821-7

Keywords

Agrobiodiversity; Carbon sequestration; Climate change mitigation; Western Ghats; Sustainable development goals

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Homegarden agroforestry combines carbon sequestration and biodiversity conservation. The study in India's Western Ghats region found that carbon stocks and species richness in homegardens varied with elevation and garden size. Homegardens contribute to carbon sequestration and biodiversity conservation, supporting UN Sustainable Development Goals, particularly Climate Action (SDG-13) and conserving agrobiodiversity (SDG-15, Life on Land).
Homegarden (HG) agroforestry combines biological carbon (C) sequestration with biodiversity conservation outcomes. Although C stocks and species richness of HGs vary along elevational gradients and as a function of holding sizes, there is no consensus on the nature and magnitude of such variations. Field studies were conducted in the Western Ghats region of central Kerala, India (180 homesteads in 20 selected panchayats), to evaluate the effects of elevation (near sea level to 1938 m) and garden size (162-10,117 m(2)) on aboveground C stocks and floristic diversity. The C stocks (per unit area) of HGs (arborescent species) were highly variable (0.63-93.65 Mg ha(-1)), as garden management was highly individualistic and it exhibited a weak negative relationship with elevation. Likewise, there was a weak negative relationship between C stocks and garden size. Tree stocking levels (stems/garden) and species richness (species/garden) positively impacted total C stocks per garden. Floristic diversity was high in the study area (753 species) and included many rare and endangered species (43 IUCN Red-Listed species) making homegardens circa situm reservoirs of biodiversity. Elevation and holding size exerted a weak negative linear relationship on Simpson's floristic diversity index, which ranged from 0.26 to 0.93 for the arboreal species. Homegardens, regardless of elevation or size, contribute to C sequestration and agrobiodiversity conservation and help achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly Climate Action (SDG-13) and conserving agrobiodiversity (SDG-15, Life on Land).

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