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Featured researches published by Bonaventure Sonké.


Nature | 2009

Increasing carbon storage in intact African tropical forests

Simon L. Lewis; Gabriela Lopez-Gonzalez; Bonaventure Sonké; Kofi Affum-Baffoe; Timothy R. Baker; Lucas Ojo; Oliver L. Phillips; Jan Reitsma; Lee White; James A. Comiskey; Marie‐Noël Djuikouo K; Corneille E. N. Ewango; Ted R. Feldpausch; Alan Hamilton; Manuel Gloor; Terese B. Hart; Annette Hladik; Jon Lloyd; Jon C. Lovett; Jean-Remy Makana; Yadvinder Malhi; Frank Mbago; Henry J. Ndangalasi; J. Peacock; Kelvin S.-H. Peh; Douglas Sheil; Terry Sunderland; Michael D. Swaine; James Taplin; David Taylor

The response of terrestrial vegetation to a globally changing environment is central to predictions of future levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide. The role of tropical forests is critical because they are carbon-dense and highly productive. Inventory plots across Amazonia show that old-growth forests have increased in carbon storage over recent decades, but the response of one-third of the world’s tropical forests in Africa is largely unknown owing to an absence of spatially extensive observation networks. Here we report data from a ten-country network of long-term monitoring plots in African tropical forests. We find that across 79 plots (163 ha) above-ground carbon storage in live trees increased by 0.63 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 between 1968 and 2007 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.22–0.94; mean interval, 1987–96). Extrapolation to unmeasured forest components (live roots, small trees, necromass) and scaling to the continent implies a total increase in carbon storage in African tropical forest trees of 0.34 Pg C yr-1 (CI, 0.15–0.43). These reported changes in carbon storage are similar to those reported for Amazonian forests per unit area, providing evidence that increasing carbon storage in old-growth forests is a pan-tropical phenomenon. Indeed, combining all standardized inventory data from this study and from tropical America and Asia together yields a comparable figure of 0.49 Mg C ha-1 yr-1 (n = 156; 562 ha; CI, 0.29–0.66; mean interval, 1987–97). This indicates a carbon sink of 1.3 Pg C yr-1 (CI, 0.8–1.6) across all tropical forests during recent decades. Taxon-specific analyses of African inventory and other data suggest that widespread changes in resource availability, such as increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, may be the cause of the increase in carbon stocks, as some theory and models predict.


New Phytologist | 2010

Drought–mortality relationships for tropical forests

Oliver L. Phillips; Geertje M.F. van der Heijden; Simon L. Lewis; Gabriela Lopez-Gonzalez; Luiz E. O. C. Aragão; Jon Lloyd; Yadvinder Malhi; Abel Monteagudo; Samuel Almeida; Esteban Álvarez Dávila; Iêda Leão do Amaral; Sandy Andelman; Ana Andrade; Luzmila Arroyo; Gerardo Aymard; Timothy R. Baker; Lilian Blanc; Damien Bonal; Atila Alves de Oliveira; Kuo-Jung Chao; Nallaret Dávila Cardozo; Lola Da Costa; Ted R. Feldpausch; Joshua B. Fisher; Nikolaos M. Fyllas; Maria Aparecida Freitas; David Galbraith; Emanuel Gloor; Niro Higuchi; Eurídice N. Honorio

*The rich ecology of tropical forests is intimately tied to their moisture status. Multi-site syntheses can provide a macro-scale view of these linkages and their susceptibility to changing climates. Here, we report pan-tropical and regional-scale analyses of tree vulnerability to drought. *We assembled available data on tropical forest tree stem mortality before, during, and after recent drought events, from 119 monitoring plots in 10 countries concentrated in Amazonia and Borneo. *In most sites, larger trees are disproportionately at risk. At least within Amazonia, low wood density trees are also at greater risk of drought-associated mortality, independent of size. For comparable drought intensities, trees in Borneo are more vulnerable than trees in the Amazon. There is some evidence for lagged impacts of drought, with mortality rates remaining elevated 2 yr after the meteorological event is over. *These findings indicate that repeated droughts would shift the functional composition of tropical forests toward smaller, denser-wooded trees. At very high drought intensities, the linear relationship between tree mortality and moisture stress apparently breaks down, suggesting the existence of moisture stress thresholds beyond which some tropical forests would suffer catastrophic tree mortality.


Science | 2016

Positive biodiversity-productivity relationship predominant in global forests.

Jingjing Liang; Thomas W. Crowther; Nicolas Picard; Susan K. Wiser; Mo Zhou; Giorgio Alberti; Ernst-Detlef Schulze; A. David McGuire; Fabio Bozzato; Hans Pretzsch; Sergio de-Miguel; Alain Paquette; Bruno Hérault; Michael Scherer-Lorenzen; Christopher B. Barrett; Henry B. Glick; Geerten M. Hengeveld; Gert-Jan Nabuurs; Sebastian Pfautsch; Hélder Viana; Alexander C. Vibrans; Christian Ammer; Peter Schall; David David Verbyla; Nadja M. Tchebakova; Markus Fischer; James V. Watson; Han Y. H. Chen; Xiangdong Lei; Mart-Jan Schelhaas

Global biodiversity and productivity The relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem productivity has been explored in detail in herbaceous vegetation, but patterns in forests are far less well understood. Liang et al. have amassed a global forest data set from >770,000 sample plots in 44 countries. A positive and consistent relationship can be discerned between tree diversity and ecosystem productivity at landscape, country, and ecoregion scales. On average, a 10% loss in biodiversity leads to a 3% loss in productivity. This means that the economic value of maintaining biodiversity for the sake of global forest productivity is more than fivefold greater than global conservation costs. Science, this issue p. 196 Global forest inventory records suggest that biodiversity loss would result in a decline in forest productivity worldwide. INTRODUCTION The biodiversity-productivity relationship (BPR; the effect of biodiversity on ecosystem productivity) is foundational to our understanding of the global extinction crisis and its impacts on the functioning of natural ecosystems. The BPR has been a prominent research topic within ecology in recent decades, but it is only recently that we have begun to develop a global perspective. RATIONALE Forests are the most important global repositories of terrestrial biodiversity, but deforestation, forest degradation, climate change, and other factors are threatening approximately one half of tree species worldwide. Although there have been substantial efforts to strengthen the preservation and sustainable use of forest biodiversity throughout the globe, the consequences of this diversity loss pose a major uncertainty for ongoing international forest management and conservation efforts. The forest BPR represents a critical missing link for accurate valuation of global biodiversity and successful integration of biological conservation and socioeconomic development. Until now, there have been limited tree-based diversity experiments, and the forest BPR has only been explored within regional-scale observational studies. Thus, the strength and spatial variability of this relationship remains unexplored at a global scale. RESULTS We explored the effect of tree species richness on tree volume productivity at the global scale using repeated forest inventories from 777,126 permanent sample plots in 44 countries containing more than 30 million trees from 8737 species spanning most of the global terrestrial biomes. Our findings reveal a consistent positive concave-down effect of biodiversity on forest productivity across the world, showing that a continued biodiversity loss would result in an accelerating decline in forest productivity worldwide. The BPR shows considerable geospatial variation across the world. The same percentage of biodiversity loss would lead to a greater relative (that is, percentage) productivity decline in the boreal forests of North America, Northeastern Europe, Central Siberia, East Asia, and scattered regions of South-central Africa and South-central Asia. In the Amazon, West and Southeastern Africa, Southern China, Myanmar, Nepal, and the Malay Archipelago, however, the same percentage of biodiversity loss would lead to greater absolute productivity decline. CONCLUSION Our findings highlight the negative effect of biodiversity loss on forest productivity and the potential benefits from the transition of monocultures to mixed-species stands in forestry practices. The BPR we discover across forest ecosystems worldwide corresponds well with recent theoretical advances, as well as with experimental and observational studies on forest and nonforest ecosystems. On the basis of this relationship, the ongoing species loss in forest ecosystems worldwide could substantially reduce forest productivity and thereby forest carbon absorption rate to compromise the global forest carbon sink. We further estimate that the economic value of biodiversity in maintaining commercial forest productivity alone is


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2013

Above-ground biomass and structure of 260 African tropical forests

Simon L. Lewis; Bonaventure Sonké; Terry Sunderland; Serge K. Begne; Gabriela Lopez-Gonzalez; M. F. van der Heijden; Oliver L. Phillips

166 billion to


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2002

The impact of land conversion on plant biodiversity in the forest zone of Cameroon

Louis Zapfack; Stefan Engwald; Bonaventure Sonké; Gaston Achoundong; Birang à Madong

490 billion per year. Although representing only a small percentage of the total value of biodiversity, this value is two to six times as much as it would cost to effectively implement conservation globally. These results highlight the necessity to reassess biodiversity valuation and the potential benefits of integrating and promoting biological conservation in forest resource management and forestry practices worldwide. Global effect of tree species diversity on forest productivity. Ground-sourced data from 777,126 global forest biodiversity permanent sample plots (dark blue dots, left), which cover a substantial portion of the global forest extent (white), reveal a consistent positive and concave-down biodiversity-productivity relationship across forests worldwide (red line with pink bands representing 95% confidence interval, right). The biodiversity-productivity relationship (BPR) is foundational to our understanding of the global extinction crisis and its impacts on ecosystem functioning. Understanding BPR is critical for the accurate valuation and effective conservation of biodiversity. Using ground-sourced data from 777,126 permanent plots, spanning 44 countries and most terrestrial biomes, we reveal a globally consistent positive concave-down BPR, showing that continued biodiversity loss would result in an accelerating decline in forest productivity worldwide. The value of biodiversity in maintaining commercial forest productivity alone—US


Plant Ecology & Diversity | 2013

Residence times of woody biomass in tropical forests

David Galbraith; Yadvinder Malhi; Kofi Affum-Baffoe; Andrea D. de Almeida Castanho; Christopher E. Doughty; Rosie A. Fisher; Simon L. Lewis; Kelvin S.-H. Peh; Oliver L. Phillips; Carlos A. Quesada; Bonaventure Sonké; Jon Lloyd

166 billion to 490 billion per year according to our estimation—is more than twice what it would cost to implement effective global conservation. This highlights the need for a worldwide reassessment of biodiversity values, forest management strategies, and conservation priorities.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Seeing Central African forests through their largest trees

Jean-François Bastin; Nicolas Barbier; Maxime Réjou-Méchain; Adeline Fayolle; Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury; Danae Maniatis; T. de Haulleville; Fidèle Baya; Hans Beeckman; D. Beina; Pierre Couteron; G. Chuyong; Gilles Dauby; Jean-Louis Doucet; Vincent Droissart; Marc Dufrêne; Corneille Ewango; Jean-François Gillet; C. H. Gonmadje; Terese B. Hart; T. Kavali; David Kenfack; Moses Libalah; Yadvinder Malhi; Jean-Remy Makana; Raphaël Pélissier; Pierre Ploton; A. Serckx; Bonaventure Sonké; Tariq Stevart

We report above-ground biomass (AGB), basal area, stem density and wood mass density estimates from 260 sample plots (mean size: 1.2 ha) in intact closed-canopy tropical forests across 12 African countries. Mean AGB is 395.7 Mg dry mass ha−1 (95% CI: 14.3), substantially higher than Amazonian values, with the Congo Basin and contiguous forest region attaining AGB values (429 Mg ha−1) similar to those of Bornean forests, and significantly greater than East or West African forests. AGB therefore appears generally higher in palaeo- compared with neotropical forests. However, mean stem density is low (426 ± 11 stems ha−1 greater than or equal to 100 mm diameter) compared with both Amazonian and Bornean forests (cf. approx. 600) and is the signature structural feature of African tropical forests. While spatial autocorrelation complicates analyses, AGB shows a positive relationship with rainfall in the driest nine months of the year, and an opposite association with the wettest three months of the year; a negative relationship with temperature; positive relationship with clay-rich soils; and negative relationships with C : N ratio (suggesting a positive soil phosphorus–AGB relationship), and soil fertility computed as the sum of base cations. The results indicate that AGB is mediated by both climate and soils, and suggest that the AGB of African closed-canopy tropical forests may be particularly sensitive to future precipitation and temperature changes.


Plant Ecology & Diversity | 2013

On the delineation of tropical vegetation types with an emphasis on forest/savanna transitions

Mireia Torello-Raventos; Ted R. Feldpausch; Elmar M. Veenendaal; Franziska Schrodt; Gustavo Saiz; Tomas F. Domingues; Gloria Djagbletey; Andrew J. Ford; J.E. Kemp; Beatriz Schwantes Marimon; Ben Hur Marimon Junior; Eddie Lenza; J. A. Ratter; Leandro Maracahipes; Denise Sasaki; Bonaventure Sonké; Louis Zapfack; Hermann Taedoumg; Daniel Villarroel; Michael Schwarz; Carlos A. Quesada; F. Yoko Ishida; G. B. Nardoto; Kofi Affum-Baffoe; L. Arroyo; David M. J. S. Bowman; Halidou Compaore; Kalu J.E. Davies; Adama Diallo; Nikolaos M. Fyllas

Floristic surveys were carried out in different land use systems(primary and secondary forest, fallows of different ages, cocoa plantations,crop fields) within the forest zone of Cameroon, to assess the impact of landconversion on above-ground plant biodiversity. Beside various diversity studies,plant density was measured and diameter at breast height was estimated.The results showed that the forest areas, which represent thehistoric biodiversity of the region, preserve the greatest number of species(160 species in primary forest and 171 in secondary forest). Our resultsindicate the relatively great importance of secondary forests as refuge areasfor primary forest plant species that may function as a starting point forpossible regeneration of original biodiversity. Species richness is reducedprogressively from the original forest (160 spp.) and secondary forests (171spp.), to Chromolaena odorata (Asteraceae) fallow fields(149 spp.), to an old fallow field (139 spp.), to a cocoa plantation (116 spp.)and to the farmland (64 spp.), where only weeds and crops contribute essentiallyto plant biodiversity. Also the number of species that are used for non-timberproducts (construction, food and medicines) decreased with increased landconversion.


Global Change Biology | 2017

Allometric equations for integrating remote sensing imagery into forest monitoring programmes

Tommaso Jucker; John P. Caspersen; Jérôme Chave; Cécile Antin; Nicolas Barbier; Frans Bongers; Michele Dalponte; Karin Y. van Ewijk; David I. Forrester; Matthias Haeni; Steven I. Higgins; Robert J. Holdaway; Yoshiko Iida; Craig G. Lorimer; Peter L. Marshall; Stéphane Momo; Glenn R. Moncrieff; Pierre Ploton; Lourens Poorter; Kassim Abd Rahman; Michael Schlund; Bonaventure Sonké; Frank J. Sterck; Anna T. Trugman; Vladimir Usoltsev; Mark C. Vanderwel; Peter Waldner; Beatrice Wedeux; Christian Wirth; Hannsjörg Wöll

Background: The woody biomass residence time (τw) of an ecosystem is an important variable for accurately simulating its biomass stocks. Methods and results: We reviewed published data from 177 forest plots across the tropics and found a six-fold variation (23–129 years) in τw across our dataset, with a median τw of ca. 50 years. This value is similar to the median default value across 21 vegetation models for tropical forests, although the range of values used in models is large (20 to 200 years). Conclusions: The notion of a constant τw across all tropical forests may be of limited utility, given the large observed variation in τw. We found that while there was little relationship between climate variables and τw, there was evidence that edaphic factors exerted a strong influence on τw. In both the Neotropics and the Paleotropics, τw was highest in heavily weathered soils, suggesting that low soil fertility and/or non-limiting soil physical conditions exert a critical influence on τw. There is considerable uncertainty in how τw will be affected by global environmental change, especially by increased atmospheric CO2. Even small changes in τw could significantly reduce the future tropical forest carbon sink predicted by many vegetation models.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Soil Does Not Explain Monodominance in a Central African Tropical Forest

Kelvin S.-H. Peh; Bonaventure Sonké; Jon Lloyd; Carlos A. Quesada; Simon L. Lewis

Large tropical trees and a few dominant species were recently identified as the main structuring elements of tropical forests. However, such result did not translate yet into quantitative approaches which are essential to understand, predict and monitor forest functions and composition over large, often poorly accessible territories. Here we show that the above-ground biomass (AGB) of the whole forest can be predicted from a few large trees and that the relationship is proved strikingly stable in 175 1-ha plots investigated across 8 sites spanning Central Africa. We designed a generic model predicting AGB with an error of 14% when based on only 5% of the stems, which points to universality in forest structural properties. For the first time in Africa, we identified some dominant species that disproportionally contribute to forest AGB with 1.5% of recorded species accounting for over 50% of the stock of AGB. Consequently, focusing on large trees and dominant species provides precise information on the whole forest stand. This offers new perspectives for understanding the functioning of tropical forests and opens new doors for the development of innovative monitoring strategies.

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Vincent Droissart

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Tariq Stevart

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Olivier J. Hardy

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Thomas L. P. Couvreur

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Louis Zapfack

University of Yaoundé I

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Gilles Dauby

Université libre de Bruxelles

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