Litcius/Paper detail

Assessing Forest Degradation in the Congo Basin: The Need to Broaden the Focus from Logging to Small-Scale Agriculture (A Systematic Review)

Timothée Besisa Nguba, Jan Bogaert, Jean‐Remy Makana, Jean-Pierre Mate Mweru, Kouagou Raoul Sambiéni, Julien Bwazani Balandi, Charles Mumbere Musavandalo, Jean‐François Bastin

2025Forests14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While the methods for monitoring deforestation are relatively well established, there is still no compromise on those for forest degradation. We propose here a systematic review on studies about forest degradation in the Congo Basin. Our analysis focused on seven key anthropogenic causes of forest degradation. Shifting agriculture emerged as the most significant driver, accounting for 61% ± 28.58% (mean ± SD) of canopy opening, 73.16% ± 16.88% aboveground carbon loss, and 30.37% ± 30.67% of tree species diversity loss over a 5–60-year period. Our analysis reveals a significant disconnect. Only 29% of the reviewed studies address this driver, while over 64% focus primarily on the consequences of industrial timber harvesting. Despite its comparatively minor contribution to degradation, with effects range from only 8.98% ± 13.63% of canopy opening, 14.79% ± 22.21 aboveground carbon loss, and 4.27 ± 21.07 tree species diversity loss over 1–20 years. Indeed, most of the methods focus on detecting changes in canopy structure associated with forest logging over a short period (0–5 years). These illustrate the need for a shift in focus in scientific research towards innovative methods, which can be developed over time, to monitor the various impacts of all causes of forest degradation.

Topics & Concepts

LoggingAgricultureScale (ratio)Focus (optics)Environmental degradationForest degradationEnvironmental resource managementAgroforestryEnvironmental scienceBusinessLand degradationGeographyForestryArchaeologyEcologyBiologyCartographyOpticsPhysicsAfrican Botany and Ecology StudiesAgriculture and Rural Development ResearchConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management