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Low, but gradually growing deforestation and carbon emissions from the Cuvette Centrale peatlands, 2001-2021

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posted on 2025-10-27, 15:56 authored by SJ Jenkins, ETA Mitchard, EN Honorio Coronado, Susan PageSusan Page, O Emba Botuli, B Crezee, SA Ifo, GC Dargie, CEN Ewango, E Bokungu, SL Lewis
<p dir="ltr">Earth’s largest tropical peatland, first mapped in 2017, is located within an immense wetland in the Congo Basin, the Cuvette Centrale, covering 167 600 km2. Here, for the first time, we estimate spatio-temporal tree cover loss patterns and the resultant carbon emissions in these forested peatlands using Global Forest Change data from 2001–2021. We find tree cover loss affected 1.4% of the peatlands over 20 years (0.07% yr−1), with 89% occurring in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC, 0.06% yr−1) and 11% in the Republic of the Congo (RoC, 0.008% yr−1). Though low, tree cover loss rates in the peatlands have increased 5x in the DRC and 2x in the RoC between the 2000’s and 2010’s, but are a fraction of the contemporary rate of peatland deforestation in Insular Southeast Asia and are 5x–7x lower than total tree cover loss rates in each country, respectively. The increase in the rate of tree cover loss and in the size of patches of tree cover loss over time and the occurrence of losses near access routes (settlements, roads and waterways) suggests increasing anthropogenic causes. Smaller loss patches are likely due to anthropogenic and natural causes. In the DRC, only 19% of patches were >0.1 km2 in the 2000’s; this rose to 81% in the 2010’s. We detected one anomalously large patch of deforestation (75 km2). A ground-truthed analysis of this patch shows that rice cultivation is driving deforestation on seasonally-flooded forest not underlain by peat and areas of peatland forest underlain by shallow peat. This is a previously unidentified threat to peatland degradation in the Cuvette Centrale. Deforested tropical peatlands can result in significant carbon emissions. We estimate that committed emissions are 108 (76.34–131.81) Tg CO2 from peat decomposition and aboveground biomass loss in the DRC between 2001–2021. Overall, tree cover loss, deforestation and carbon emissions are low compared to other regions with large areas of tropical peatlands, with 98.6% of the Cuvette Centrale peatlands being intact when considering tree cover loss. Ground-based studies including participation from residents of peatland-adjacent communities are acutely needed to validate our findings, improve peatland maps and prioritise local people in future management decisions, and prevent future greater losses.</p>

Funding

CongoPeat: Past, Present and Future of the Peatlands of the Central Congo Basin

Natural Environment Research Council

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Peatland resilience: Knowledge exchange for the conservation and sustainable management of forested tropical peatlands

Natural Environment Research Council

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History

Author affiliation

University of Leicester College of Science & Engineering Geography, Geology & Environment

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Environmental Research Letters

Volume

20

Issue

10

Pagination

104050 - 104050

Publisher

IOP Publishing

eissn

1748-9326

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-10-27

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Susan Page

Deposit date

2025-10-11

Data Access Statement

All data that support the findings of this study are included within the article (and any supplementary files).

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