Biophysical effects of land cover changes in West Africa: a systematic review Academic Article

abstract

  • West Africa is undergoing rapid agricultural intensification driven by population growth, leading to significant anthropogenic land use and land cover change (LCC), including both deforestation and afforestation. These changes can profoundly affect the regional climate system by altering the surface energy balance, moisture fluxes, and atmospheric circulation, potentially exacerbating the vulnerability of human, ecological, and economic systems. Despite the ability of climate models to simulate LCC impacts, considerable uncertainties remain, particularly in simulations of precipitation and temperature responses. This study provides the first multidisciplinary systematic review of LCC impacts in West Africa. Data from 26 selected publications were eventually synthesized from an initial pool of nearly 6000 studies. Results indicate that deforestation generally contributes to regional warming, with significant historical temperature increases of 0.26 ampersand-flag-changeplusmn; 0.12 ampersand-flag-changedeg;C and projected increases of 0.88 ampersand-flag-changeplusmn; 0.25 ampersand-flag-changedeg;C under the future scenarios. Conversely, afforestation could have significantly cooled the climate, lowering temperatures by ampersand-flag-changeminus;0.24 ampersand-flag-changeplusmn; 0.14 ampersand-flag-changedeg;C historically and ampersand-flag-changeminus;0.22 ampersand-flag-changeplusmn; 0.14 ampersand-flag-changedeg;C in future scenarios, without even accounting for carbon sequestration. Deforestation decreases regional precipitation by 80 ampersand-flag-changeplusmn; 58 mm yrampersand-flag-changeminus;1 historically and ampersand-flag-changeminus;55 ampersand-flag-changeplusmn; 102 mm yrampersand-flag-changeminus;1 in future scenarios, while large-scale afforestation could substantially reduce droughts with increased precipitation, averaging 40 ampersand-flag-changeplusmn; 67 mm yrampersand-flag-changeminus;1 historically and 80 ampersand-flag-changeplusmn; 58 mm yrampersand-flag-changeminus;1 in future scenarios. These results emphasize the need to integrate LCC-induced climate effects into land-based mitigation strategies, climate policy, and assessment frameworks.

publication date

  • 2025-7-1

edition

  • 20

keywords

  • Afforestation
  • Agricultural Intensification
  • Anthropogenic Land Use
  • Assessment Framework
  • Atmospheric Circulation
  • Biophysical Effects
  • Carbon Sequestration
  • Change Impact
  • Climate Assessment
  • Climate Change Impacts
  • Climate Change Policy
  • Climate Effect
  • Climate Modeling
  • Climate Models
  • Climate Policy Frameworks
  • Climate System
  • Deforestation
  • Drought
  • Ecological System
  • Economic System
  • Energy Balance
  • Historical Temperature
  • Human Systems
  • Increased Precipitation
  • Interfacial Energy
  • Land Cover Change
  • Land Use
  • Land-based Mitigation
  • Mitigation Strategies
  • Moisture Flux
  • Population Growth
  • Precipitation Response
  • Regional Climate
  • Regional Precipitation
  • Regional Warming
  • Surface Energy Balance
  • Temperature Effect
  • Temperature Rise
  • Vulnerability
  • West Africa
  • Western Africa