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Dive into the research topics where Jean-François Bastin is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-François Bastin.


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

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.


Ecological Applications | 2014

Aboveground biomass mapping of African forest mosaics using canopy texture analysis: toward a regional approach.

Jean-François Bastin; Nicolas Barbier; Pierre Couteron; Benoît Adams; Aurélie Shapiro; Jan Bogaert; Charles De Cannière

In the context of the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions caused by deforestation and forest degradation (the REDD+ program), optical very high resolution (VHR) satellite images provide an opportunity to characterize forest canopy structure and to quantify aboveground biomass (AGB) at less expense than methods based on airborne remote sensing data. Among the methods for processing these VHR images, Fourier textural ordination (FOTO) presents a good method to detect forest canopy structural heterogeneity and therefore to predict AGB variations. Notably, the method does not saturate at intermediate AGB values as do pixelwise processing of available space borne optical and radar signals. However, a regional-scale application requires overcoming two difficulties: (1) instrumental effects due to variations in sun–scene–sensor geometry or sensor-specific responses that preclude the use of wide arrays of images acquired under heterogeneous conditions and (2) forest structural diversity including monodominant or open canopy forests, which are of particular importance in Central Africa. In this study, we demonstrate the feasibility of a rigorous regional study of canopy texture by harmonizing FOTO indices of images acquired from two different sensors (Geoeye-1 and QuickBird-2) and different sun–scene–sensor geometries and by calibrating a piecewise biomass inversion model using 26 inventory plots (1 ha) sampled across very heterogeneous forest types. A good agreement was found between observed and predicted AGB (residual standard error [RSE] = 15%; R2 = 0.85; P < 0.001) across a wide range of AGB levels from 26 Mg/ha to 460 Mg/ha, and was confirmed by cross validation. A high-resolution biomass map (100-m pixels) was produced for a 400-km2 area, and predictions obtained from both imagery sources were consistent with each other (r = 0.86; slope = 1.03; intercept = 12.01 Mg/ha). These results highlight the horizontal structure of forest canopy as a powerful descriptor of the entire forest stand structure and heterogeneity. In particular, we show that quantitative metrics resulting from such textural analysis offer new opportunities to characterize the spatial and temporal variation of the structure of dense forests and may complement the toolbox used by tropical forest ecologists, managers or REDD+ national monitoring, reporting and verification bodies.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Wood Specific Gravity Variations and Biomass of Central African Tree Species: The Simple Choice of the Outer Wood

Jean-François Bastin; Adeline Fayolle; Yegor Tarelkin; Jan Van den Bulcke; Thalès de Haulleville; Frédéric Mortier; Hans Beeckman; Joris Van Acker; Adeline Serckx; Jan Bogaert; Charles De Cannière

Context Wood specific gravity is a key element in tropical forest ecology. It integrates many aspects of tree mechanical properties and functioning and is an important predictor of tree biomass. Wood specific gravity varies widely among and within species and also within individual trees. Notably, contrasted patterns of radial variation of wood specific gravity have been demonstrated and related to regeneration guilds (light demanding vs. shade-bearing). However, although being repeatedly invoked as a potential source of error when estimating the biomass of trees, both intraspecific and radial variations remain little studied. In this study we characterized detailed pith-to-bark wood specific gravity profiles among contrasted species prominently contributing to the biomass of the forest, i.e., the dominant species, and we quantified the consequences of such variations on the biomass. Methods Radial profiles of wood density at 8% moisture content were compiled for 14 dominant species in the Democratic Republic of Congo, adapting a unique 3D X-ray scanning technique at very high spatial resolution on core samples. Mean wood density estimates were validated by water displacement measurements. Wood density profiles were converted to wood specific gravity and linear mixed models were used to decompose the radial variance. Potential errors in biomass estimation were assessed by comparing the biomass estimated from the wood specific gravity measured from pith-to-bark profiles, from global repositories, and from partial information (outer wood or inner wood). Results Wood specific gravity profiles from pith-to-bark presented positive, neutral and negative trends. Positive trends mainly characterized light-demanding species, increasing up to 1.8 g.cm-3 per meter for Piptadeniastrum africanum, and negative trends characterized shade-bearing species, decreasing up to 1 g.cm-3 per meter for Strombosia pustulata. The linear mixed model showed the greater part of wood specific gravity variance was explained by species only (45%) followed by a redundant part between species and regeneration guilds (36%). Despite substantial variation in wood specific gravity profiles among species and regeneration guilds, we found that values from the outer wood were strongly correlated to values from the whole profile, without any significant bias. In addition, we found that wood specific gravity from the DRYAD global repository may strongly differ depending on the species (up to 40% for Dialium pachyphyllum). Main Conclusion Therefore, when estimating forest biomass in specific sites, we recommend the systematic collection of outer wood samples on dominant species. This should prevent the main errors in biomass estimations resulting from wood specific gravity and allow for the collection of new information to explore the intraspecific variation of mechanical properties of trees.


American Journal of Primatology | 2015

Feeding ecology of bonobos living in forest-savannah mosaics: Diet seasonal variation and importance of fallback foods.

Adeline Serckx; Hjalmar S. Kühl; Roseline Beudels-Jamar; Pascal Poncin; Jean-François Bastin; Marie-Claude Huynen

Primates along with many other animal taxa are forced to cope with large shifts in basic ecological conditions because of rapid anthropogenically induced changes of their habitats. One of the coping strategies for primates is to adjust their diet to these changes, and several studies have demonstrated the importance of fallback resources for this. Bonobos, like chimpanzees, might be particularly vulnerable to habitat fragmentation because of their high dependence on fruit availability. Little is known, however, about bonobo feeding ecology in fragmented habitats and their use of fallback resources. In this study, we investigate diet seasonal variation and the exploitation of preferred and fallback foods in a bonobo population living in forest‐savannah mosaics. Results show that bonobos have adapted to this fragmented habitat by feeding on only a few fruit species, including an important number of non‐tree species (liana, herb and savannah shrub), in comparison to populations living in dense forests. These non‐tree plants have been defined as fallback and non‐preferred foods, which are most probably consumed to maintain high frugivory. Interestingly, we identified that preferred foods are all typical of mature forests while fallback resources are mainly found in forest edges or disturbed areas. This finding indicates that bonobos prefer to use mature forests when feeding, as they do for nesting, but extend their range use to forest areas in close proximity to humans when the availability of preferred fruits is low. Finally, we show that bonobo diet relies heavily on two abundant fallback fruits: Musanga cecropioides and Marantochloa leucantha. Other studies have demonstrated that the selection of abundant fallback resources enables primates to subsist at high densities and to maintain cohesive groups, as observed at this study site. Our findings suggest that bonobos living in forest‐savannah mosaics can be considered as staple fallback food consumers. Am. J. Primatol. 77:948–962, 2015.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Spatial Distribution of Carbon Stored in Forests of the Democratic Republic of Congo

Liang Xu; Sassan Saatchi; Aurélie Shapiro; Victoria Meyer; Antonio Ferraz; Yan Yang; Jean-François Bastin; Norman Banks; Pascal Boeckx; Hans Verbeeck; Simon L. Lewis; Elvis Tshibasu Muanza; Eddy Bongwele; Francois Kayembe; Daudet Mbenza; Laurent Kalau; Franck Mukendi; Francis Ilunga; Daniel Ebuta

National forest inventories in tropical regions are sparse and have large uncertainty in capturing the physiographical variations of forest carbon across landscapes. Here, we produce for the first time the spatial patterns of carbon stored in forests of Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) by using airborne LiDAR inventory of more than 432,000 ha of forests based on a designed probability sampling methodology. The LiDAR mean top canopy height measurements were trained to develop an unbiased carbon estimator by using 92 1-ha ground plots distributed across key forest types in DRC. LiDAR samples provided estimates of mean and uncertainty of aboveground carbon density at provincial scales and were combined with optical and radar satellite imagery in a machine learning algorithm to map forest height and carbon density over the entire country. By using the forest definition of DRC, we found a total of 23.3 ± 1.6 GtC carbon with a mean carbon density of 140 ± 9 MgC ha−1 in the aboveground and belowground live trees. The probability based LiDAR samples capture variations of structure and carbon across edaphic and climate conditions, and provide an alternative approach to national ground inventory for efficient and precise assessment of forest carbon resources for emission reduction (ER) programs.


Archive | 2018

Height-diameter input data and R-code to fit and assess height-diameter models, from 'Field methods for sampling tree height for tropical forest biomass estimation' in Methods in Ecology and Evolution

Martin J. P. Sullivan; Simon L. Lewis; Wannes Hubau; Lan Qie; Timothy R. Baker; Lindsay Banin; Jérôme Chave; Aida Cuni Sanchez; Ted R. Feldpausch; Gabriela Lopez-Gonzalez; E.J.M.M. Arets; Peter S. Ashton; Jean-François Bastin; Nicholas J. Berry; Jan Bogaert; Rene G. A. Boot; Francis Q. Brearley; Roel J. W. Brienen; David F. R. P. Burslem; Charles De Cannière; Markéta Chudomelová; Martin Dančák; Corneille Ewango; Radim Hédl; Jon Lloyd; Jean-Remy Makana; Yadvinder Malhi; Beatriz Schwantes Marimon; Ben Hur Marimon Junior; Faizah Metali

1. Quantifying the relationship between tree diameter and height is a key component of efforts to estimate biomass and carbon stocks in tropical forests. Although substantial site-to-site variation in height-diameter allometries has been documented, the time consuming nature of measuring all tree heights in an inventory plot means that most studies do not include height, or else use generic pan-tropical or regional allometric equations to estimate height. 2. Using a pan-tropical dataset of 73 plots where at least 150 trees had in-field ground-based height measurements, we examined how the number of trees sampled affects the performance of locally-derived height-diameter allometries, and evaluated the performance of different methods for sampling trees for height measurement. 3. Using cross-validation, we found that allometries constructed with just 20 locally measured values could often predict tree height with lower error than regional or climate-based allometries (mean reduction in prediction error = 0.46 m). The predictive performance of locally-derived allometries improved with sample size, but with diminishing returns in performance gains when more than 40 trees were sampled. Estimates of stand-level biomass produced using local allometries to estimate tree height show no over- or under-estimation bias when compared with estimates using measured heights. We evaluated five strategies to sample trees for height measurement, and found that sampling strategies that included measuring the heights of the ten largest diameter trees in a plot outperformed (in terms of resulting in local height-diameter models with low height prediction error) entirely random or diameter size-class stratified approaches. 4. Our results indicate that even remarkably limited sampling of heights can be used to refine height-diameter allometries. We recommend aiming for a conservative threshold of sampling 50 trees per location for height measurement, and including the ten trees with the largest diameter in this sample.


Journal of Biogeography | 2014

Patterns of tree species composition across tropical African forests

Adeline Fayolle; Michael D. Swaine; Jean-François Bastin; Nils Bourland; James A. Comiskey; Gilles Dauby; Jean-Louis Doucet; Jean-François Gillet; Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury; Olivier J. Hardy; Ben Kirunda; François N. Kouamé; Andrew J. Plumptre


PLOS ONE | 2014

Nest grouping patterns of bonobos (Pan paniscus) in relation to fruit availability in a forest-savannah mosaic

Adeline Serckx; Marie-Claude Huynen; Jean-François Bastin; Alain Hambuckers; Roseline Beudels-Jamar; Marie Vimond; Emilien Raynaud; Hjalmar S. Kühl


Carbon Balance and Management | 2016

Using fragmentation to assess degradation of forest edges in Democratic Republic of Congo

Aurélie Shapiro; Naikoa Aguilar-Amuchastegui; Patrick Hostert; Jean-François Bastin


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2017

Toward a general tropical forest biomass prediction model from very high resolution optical satellite images

P. Ploton; Nicolas Barbier; Pierre Couteron; C.M. Antin; N. Ayyappan; N. Balachandran; N. Barathan; Jean-François Bastin; G. Chuyong; Gilles Dauby; Vincent Droissart; J.P. Gastellu-Etchegorry; Narcisse Guy Kamdem; David Kenfack; Moses Libalah; G. Mofack; S.T. Momo; S. Pargal; P. Petronelli; Christophe Proisy; M. Réjou-Méchain; Bonaventure Sonké; N. Texier; Duncan W. Thomas; P. Verley; D. Zebaze Dongmo; Uta Berger; Raphaël Pélissier

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Charles De Cannière

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Gilles Dauby

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Pierre Couteron

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Raphaël Pélissier

French Institute of Pondicherry

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C De Cannière

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Nicolas Barbier

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Aurélie Shapiro

World Wide Fund for Nature

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