2021
DOI: 10.3389/fcosc.2021.690562
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Proximate Causes of Forest Degradation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Vary in Space and Time

Abstract: Forest degradation, generally defined as a reduction in the delivery of forest ecosystem services, can have long-term impacts on biodiversity, climate, and local livelihoods. The quantification of forest degradation, its dynamics and proximate causes can help prompt early action to mitigate carbon emissions and inform relevant land use policies. The Democratic Republic of the Congo is largely forested with a relatively low deforestation rate, but anthropogenic degradation has been increasing in recent years. W… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Small-scale agricultural activities are generally spatially limited around inhabited areas due to practical reasons -minimal travel time to fields is more efficient, and secondary forests and fallow areas are preferred to primary forests, meaning that the agricultural expansion is not endless. Political instability, conflicts and insecurity have long driven migration patterns in the region, which could force people away from forests 50,82,83 . In the Central African Republic, civil war, combined with a lack of infrastructure, low population density has driven many people from rural areas to cities, and limited the expansion of industrial agriculture which could potentially deforest large areas once stability returns 84,85 .…”
Section: Trends In Forest Disturbance (2015-2020)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Small-scale agricultural activities are generally spatially limited around inhabited areas due to practical reasons -minimal travel time to fields is more efficient, and secondary forests and fallow areas are preferred to primary forests, meaning that the agricultural expansion is not endless. Political instability, conflicts and insecurity have long driven migration patterns in the region, which could force people away from forests 50,82,83 . In the Central African Republic, civil war, combined with a lack of infrastructure, low population density has driven many people from rural areas to cities, and limited the expansion of industrial agriculture which could potentially deforest large areas once stability returns 84,85 .…”
Section: Trends In Forest Disturbance (2015-2020)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The central premise of our approach is the identification of multiple overlapping drivers, which is representative of DD occurring at national and sub-national scales 50,56,82,113 and the result of the actions of multiple actors, multiple processes and motivations 33,104,114 . Global assessments, or postdisturbance land use cannot adequately discern multiple drivers 56,104 and are not relevant for decision making which requires national context 41 .…”
Section: Direct Drivers Of Changementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Knowing which deforestation rates would be observed under expected, often profit oriented human land-use allocation 7 , is a precondition for sound evaluation of policies with the potential to accelerate or decelerate rates of deforestation 8 . Commonly-cited influences on this rate include command-and-control policies 4 , pre-election promises 9 , armed conflicts 10 or mining 11 , as well as climate anomalies 12 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar 2016 high of observed forest losses was found in Indonesia, which may be attributed to the same El Niño event, which also caused high forest losses in Brazil. (c) Armed conflicts in the DR Congo were associated with an AC phase of deforestation from 2012 onwards10 . Armed conflicts likely accelerate deforestation by land-use activities associated with movements of refugees and displaced people, and a loss in confidence of land users about their ability to exploit future rents from avoided deforestation today.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%