Authors:
Prof. Dr. Xiao-Peng Song | Texas Tech University | United States
Prof. Matthew C. Hansen | University of Maryland
Dr. Peter Potapov | University of Maryland
Bernard Adusei | University of Maryland
Jeffrey Pickering | University of Maryland
Dr. Marcos Adami | INPE (Brazilian National Institute for Space Research)
Dr. Andre Lima | University of Maryland
Dr. Viviana Zalles | University of Maryland
Prof. Dr. Stephen Stehman | State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry
Dr. Carlos Di Bella | Universidad de Buenos Aires
Maria Conde | Universidad de Buenos Aires
Esteban Copati | Buenos Aires Grain Exchange
Lucas Fernandes | Companhia Nacional de Abastecimento
Andres Hernandez-Serna | University of Maryland
Samuel Jantz | University of Maryland
Dr. Amy Pickens | University of Maryland
Dr. Svetlana Turubanova | University of Maryland
Dr. Alexandra Tyukavina | University of Maryland
Agricultural extensification at the expense of natural vegetation loss is a central environmental issue in the tropics as well as a major source of greenhouse gas emissions. A prominent goal of policies mitigating climate change and biodiversity loss is to achieve zero-deforestation in the global supply chain of key commodities, such as palm oil and soybean. However, the extent and dynamics of deforestation driven by commodity expansion are largely unknown. Here we mapped annual soybean extent at 30-meter spatial resolution over the southern hemisphere of South America from 2000 to 2019. Our study area encompasses all major biomes where soybeans are cultivated: Amazonia, Atlantic Forest, Cerrado, Chaco, Chiquitania, Pampas, and more recently, Pantanal and Caatinga biomes. Our maps were produced using wall-to-wall Landsat and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer satellite data, a stratified random sample of Sentinel 2 satellite data, and three years of continent-wide field observations. We assessed the accuracy of the maps using data collected from field visits obtained at sample pixels selected by a stratified two-stage cluster sampling design. To understand the shifting dynamics of land-use change in South America in the 21st century we quantified the amount of primary forests, non-primary forests, non-forest natural vegetation, pre-existing croplands and pastures that were replaced by soybean. We also integrated the annual soybean maps with annual forest loss maps, and quantified deforestation caused by soybean as a direct and latent driver, highlighting emerging hotspots of soybean expansion as a direct driver of deforestation.
Our results showed that from 2000-2019, the area cultivated with soybean in South America more than doubled from 26.4 Mha to 55.1 Mha. Most soybean expansion occurred on pastures originally converted from natural vegetation for cattle production. The most rapid expansion occurred in the Brazilian Amazon, where soybean area increased more than 10-fold, from 0.4 Mha to 4.6 Mha. Across the continent, 9% of forest loss was converted to soybean by 2016. Soy-driven deforestation was concentrated at the active frontiers, nearly half located in the Brazilian Cerrado. Our results suggest that efforts to limit future deforestation must consider how soybean expansion may drive deforestation indirectly by displacing pasture or other land uses. The targeting of single commodities and single geographies for monitoring omits leakage effects, inter-commodity transitions, and land banking, all of which may result in concurrent increased forest loss and increased soybean cultivated area. Holistic approaches that track land use across all commodities coupled with vegetation monitoring are required to maintain critical ecosystem services.
The 30-meter resolution South America soybean map product is being updated on an annual basis, and freely available at: https://glad.earthengine.app/view/south-america-soybean.