An unexpectedly large count of trees in the West African Sahara and Sahel.

Nature 2020
Open on PubMed

A large proportion of dryland trees and shrubs (hereafter referred to collectively as trees) grow in isolation, without canopy closure. These non-forest trees have a crucial role in biodiversity, and provide ecosystem services such as carbon storage, food resources and shelter for humans and animals<sup>1,2</sup>. However, most public interest relating to trees is devoted to forests, and trees outside of forests are not well-documented<sup>3</sup>. Here we map the crown size of each tree more than 3&#xa0;m<sup>2</sup> in size over a land area that spans 1.3&#xa0;million km<sup>2</sup> in the West African Sahara, Sahel and sub-humid zone, using submetre-resolution satellite imagery and deep learning<sup>4</sup>. We detected over 1.8&#xa0;billion individual trees (13.4&#xa0;trees per hectare), with a median crown size of 12&#xa0;m<sup>2</sup>, along a rainfall gradient from 0 to 1,000&#xa0;mm per year. The canopy cover increases from 0.1% (0.7&#xa0;trees per hectare) in hyper-arid areas, through 1.6% (9.9&#xa0;trees per hectare) in arid and 5.6% (30.1&#xa0;trees per hectare) in semi-arid zones, to 13.3% (47&#xa0;trees per hectare) in sub-humid areas. Although the overall canopy cover is low, the relatively high density of isolated trees challenges prevailing narratives about dryland desertification<sup>5-7</sup>, and even the desert shows a surprisingly high tree density. Our assessment suggests a way to monitor trees outside of forests globally, and to explore their role in mitigating degradation, climate change and poverty.