Committed carbon emissions, deforestation, and community land conversion from oil palm plantation expansion in West Kalimantan, Indonesia

Industrial agricultural plantations are a rapidly increasing yet largely unmeasured source of tropical land cover change. Here, we evaluate impacts of oil palm plantation development on land cover, carbon flux, and agrarian community lands in West Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo. With a spatially expl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2012-05, Vol.109 (19), p.7559-7564
Hauptverfasser: Carlson, Kimberly M, Curran, Lisa M, Ratnasari, Dessy, Pittman, Alice M, Soares-Filho, Britaldo S, Asner, Gregory P, Trigg, Simon N, Gaveau, David A, Lawrence, Deborah, Rodrigues, Hermann O
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Industrial agricultural plantations are a rapidly increasing yet largely unmeasured source of tropical land cover change. Here, we evaluate impacts of oil palm plantation development on land cover, carbon flux, and agrarian community lands in West Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo. With a spatially explicit land change/carbon bookkeeping model, parameterized using high-resolution satellite time series and informed by socioeconomic surveys, we assess previous and project future plantation expansion under five scenarios. Although fire was the primary proximate cause of 1989–2008 deforestation (93%) and net carbon emissions (69%), by 2007–2008, oil palm directly caused 27% of total and 40% of peatland deforestation. Plantation land sources exhibited distinctive temporal dynamics, comprising 81% forests on mineral soils (1994–2001), shifting to 69% peatlands (2008–2011). Plantation leases reveal vast development potential. In 2008, leases spanned ∼65% of the region, including 62% on peatlands and 59% of community-managed lands, yet
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1200452109