A lesson unlearned? Underestimating tree cover in drylands biases global restoration maps
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Fagan, ME. A lesson unlearned? Underestimating tree cover in drylands biases global restoration maps. Glob Change Biol. 2020; 26: 4679– 4690. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15187
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This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Fagan, ME. A lesson unlearned? Underestimating tree cover in drylands biases global restoration maps. Glob Change Biol. 2020; 26: 4679– 4690. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15187, which has been published in final form at [ https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15187. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions
Access to this item will begin on 7/2/2022
Access to this item will begin on 7/2/2022
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Abstract
Two  recent  global  maps  of  tree  restoration  potential  have  identified  vast  regions  where tree cover could be increased, ranging from 0.9 to 2.3 billion hectares. Both maps, however, emphasized dryland regions, with arid biomes making up 36%–42% of  potential  restoration  area.  Dryland  biomes  have  repeatedly  been  recognized  as  inappropriate regions for expanding tree cover due to the risks of biodiversity loss, water  overconsumption,  and  fire,  so  maps  that  highlight  these  regions  for  restora-tion  must  sustain  careful  scrutiny.  Here,  I  show  that  both  recent  attempts  to  map  restoration potential in arid regions have been hindered by underlying errors in the global tree cover maps they used. Systematic underestimates of existing sparse tree cover  led  directly  to  large  overestimates  of  the  potential  for  tree  recovery  in  dry-lands.  The  Atlas  of  Forest  Landscape  Restoration  Opportunities  (Laestadius  et  al.,  Unasylva, 2011, 62, 47) overestimated tree restoration potential across a third of arid biomes  by  between  7%  and  20%  (55–166  million  hectares  [Mha]).  Similarly,  Bastin,  Finegold, Garcia, Mollicone, et al. (Science, 2019, 365, 76) overestimated tree restora-tion  potential  across  all  arid  biomes  by  33%–45%  (316–440  Mha).  These  inaccura-cies  limit  the  utility  of  this  research  for  policy  decisions  in  drylands  and  overstate  the  potential  for  tree  planting  to  address  climate  change.  Given  this  long-standing  but underappreciated challenge in mapping global tree cover, I propose various ways forward that keep this lesson in mind. To better monitor and restore tree cover, I call for re-interpretation and correction of existing global maps, and for a new focus on quantifying sparse tree cover in drylands and other systems.
