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January 26, 2017

As part of a new atlas of imagery for West Africa, nearly 33 years of land-use change can be seen in Nigeria's Okomu Forest Reserve.

EarthViews is a continuing series in which we share a USGS Image of the Week featuring the USGS/NASA Landsat program. From the artistry of Earth imagery to natural and human-caused land change over time, check back every Friday to finish your week with a visual flourish!

The EarthView: West Africa Atlas Details Efforts to Manage, Preserve Okomu Forest

Image shows a satellite view of the Okomu Forest of Nigeria
In this Landsat 8 image, taken on January 4, 2017, nearly 33 years of change in land-use can be seen in the Okomu Forest Reserve. Credit: USGS/NASA Landsat Program.(Public domain.)

Description:

A new atlas named Landscapes of West Africa: A Window on a Changing World tells the story of transformations and trends across many lands in West Africa, including this look at the threat of human activities in the Okomu Forest Reserve in southern Nigeria.

Closed-canopy tropical moist forest once covered large parts of this Nigerian landscape. Since the 1940s, however, systematic rotational logging and farming have caused major losses of natural forest.

Image shows a satellite view of the Okomu Forest of Nigeria
In this Landsat 5 image, taken on December 11, 1984, the Okomu Forest Reserve can be seen in the center. Credit: USGS/NASA Landsat Program.(Public domain.)

In the 1984 Landsat 5 image, parts of the reserve have already been converted to plantations of oil palm and rubber trees, as seen in shades of magenta. In 1985, a wildlife sanctuary of 44 square miles was carved out of the most intact area of the forest reserve to protect a small population of forest elephants and several species of threatened primates.

The sanctuary was designated the Okomu National Park in 1999 to give it more protection from plantation and farm development, as well as human settlement expansion. The visible impact of large-scale rubber and oil palm plantation expansion in the northern half of the forest reserve is easily seen in the 2017 Landsat 8 image. However, the Okomu National Park remains largely protected within the reserve and stands out against its surroundings.

The atlas and its accompanying datasets are valuable tools to Nigerian forest managers in their effort to protect Okomu from further ecosystem degradation.

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