Faculty of Geomatics, Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences, Moltkestr. 30, 76133, Karlsruhe, Germany.
Environ Monit Assess. 2010 Feb;161(1-4):531-48. doi: 10.1007/s10661-009-0766-3. Epub 2009 Mar 28.
Processes of deforestation, known to threaten tropical forest biodiversity, have not yet been studied sufficiently in East Africa. To shed light on the patterns and causes of human influences on protected forest ecosystems, comparisons of different study areas regarding land cover dynamics and potential drivers are needed. We analyze the development of land cover since the early 1970s for three protected East African rainforests and their surrounding farmlands and assess the relationship between the observed changes in the context of the protection status of the forests. Processing of Landsat satellite imagery of eight or seven time steps in regular intervals results in 12 land cover classes for the Kakamega-Nandi forests (Kenya) and Budongo Forest (Uganda) whereas ten are distinguished for Mabira Forest (Uganda). The overall classification accuracy assessed for the year 2001 or 2003 is similarly high for all three study areas (81% to 85%). The time series reveal that, despite their protection status, Kakamega-Nandi forests and Mabira Forest experienced major forest decrease, the first a continuous forest loss of 31% between 1972/1973 and 2001, the latter an abrupt loss of 24% in the late 1970s/early 1980s. For both forests, the temporally dense time series show short-term fluctuations in forest classes (e.g., areas of forest regrowth since the 1980s or exotic secondary bushland species from the 1990s onwards). Although selectively logged, Budongo Forest shows a much more stable forest cover extent. A visual overlay with population distribution for all three regions clearly indicates a relationship between forest loss and areas of high population density, suggesting population pressure as a main driver of deforestation. The revealed forest losses due to local and commercial exploitation further demonstrate that weak management impedes effective forest protection in East Africa.
森林砍伐过程被认为威胁着热带森林的生物多样性,但在东非尚未得到充分研究。为了阐明人类对受保护森林生态系统的影响的模式和原因,需要对不同研究区域的土地覆盖动态和潜在驱动因素进行比较。我们分析了三个东非受保护雨林及其周围农田自 20 世纪 70 年代初以来的土地覆盖发展情况,并评估了观察到的变化与森林保护状况之间的关系。对 Landsat 卫星图像进行处理,每隔一段时间进行 8 或 7 个时间步长的处理,结果为卡卡梅加-南迪森林(肯尼亚)和布顿戈森林(乌干达)生成 12 个土地覆盖类别,而马比拉森林(乌干达)则区分出 10 个类别。所有三个研究区域的 2001 年或 2003 年的整体分类精度都相似高(81%至 85%)。时间序列表明,尽管处于保护状态,卡卡梅加-南迪森林和马比拉森林仍经历了大规模森林减少,前者在 1972/1973 年至 2001 年间连续减少了 31%,后者在 20 世纪 70 年代末/80 年代初突然减少了 24%。对于这两个森林,时间密集的时间序列显示出森林类别的短期波动(例如,自 20 世纪 80 年代以来的森林再生区域或 20 世纪 90 年代以来的外来次生灌木丛物种)。尽管被选择性采伐,布顿戈森林的森林覆盖范围仍相对稳定。对所有三个区域的人口分布进行视觉叠加,清楚地表明了森林减少与人口密度高的区域之间的关系,表明人口压力是森林砍伐的主要驱动因素。由于当地和商业开发而导致的森林损失进一步表明,薄弱的管理阻碍了东非有效的森林保护。