4.5 Article

Natural and Anthropogenic Variation of Stand Structure and Aboveground Biomass in Niger Delta Mangrove Forests

Journal

FRONTIERS IN FORESTS AND GLOBAL CHANGE
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/ffgc.2021.746671

Keywords

mangrove; aboveground biomass; leaf area index; disturbance; stand structure (tree size diversity); Niger Delta

Funding

  1. Presidential Scholarship Scheme for Innovation and Development (PRESSID)
  2. Global Change Ecology Lab, School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh
  3. Elizabeth Sinclair Irvine Bequest and Centenary Agroforestry 89 Fund
  4. National Environment Research Council

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Mangrove forests in the Niger Delta are important coastal wetlands with poorly quantified productivity and at risk of loss from various factors. This study found higher plot biomass near protected sites and tidal channels, and the lowest biomass in areas with urbanization and wood exploitation. This research highlights the need for manage mangrove resources to reduce negative impacts and opportunities for further study.
Mangrove forests are important coastal wetlands because of the ecosystem services they provide especially their carbon potential. Mangrove forests productivity in the Niger Delta are poorly quantified and at risk of loss from oil pollution, deforestation, and invasive species. Here, we report the most extensive stem girth survey yet of mangrove plots for stand and canopy structure in the Niger Delta, across tidal and disturbance gradients. We established twenty-five geo-referenced 0.25-ha plots across two estuarine basins. We estimated aboveground biomass (AGB) from established allometric equations based on stem surveys. Leaf area index (LAI) was recorded using hemispherical photos. We estimated a mean AGB of 83.7 Mg ha(-1) with an order of magnitude range, from 11 to 241 Mg ha(-1). We found significantly higher plot biomass in close proximity to a protected site and tidal channels, and the lowest in the sites where urbanization and wood exploitation was actively taking place. The mean LAI was 1.45 and ranged fivefold from 0.46 to 2.41 and there was a significant positive correlation between AGB and LAI (R-2 = 0.31). We divided the plots into two disturbance regimes and three nipa palm (Nypa fruticans) invasion levels. Lower stem diameter (5-15 cm) accounted for 70% of the total biomass in disturbed plots, while undisturbed regimes had a more even (similar to 25%) contribution of different diameter at breast height (DBH) size classes to AGB. Nipa palm invasion also showed a significant link to larger variations in LAI and the proportion of basal area removed from plots. We conclude that mangrove forest degradation and exploitation is removing larger stems (> 15 cm DBH), preferentially from these mangroves forests and creates an avenue for nipa palm colonization. This research identifies opportunities to manage the utilization of mangrove resources and reduce any negative impact. Our data can be used with remote sensing to estimate biomass in the Niger Delta and the inclusion of soil, leaf properties and demographic rates can analyze mangrove-nipa competition in the region.

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