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58,272
result(s) for
"natural forest"
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Forest fire creates inferno
by
Spilsbury, Louise, author
,
Spilsbury, Richard, 1963- author
,
Spilsbury, Louise. Earth under attack
in
Forest fires Juvenile literature.
,
Natural disasters Juvenile literature.
,
Forest fires.
2018
Explains how a forest fire can form and spread.
At loggerheads? : agricultural expansion, poverty reduction, and environment in the tropical forests
2007,2006
Despite the vast number of books and reports on tropical deforestation, there's confusion about the causes of forest loss and forest poverty, and the effectiveness of policy responses. At Loggerheads seeks to describe ways to reconciles pressures for agricultural expansion in the tropics with the urgent needs for both forest conservation and poverty alleviation. It diagnoses the causes and impacts of forest loss and the reasons for the association of forests and poverty. It looks at how policies - modulated by local conditions - act simultaneously on deforestation and poverty, creating tradeoffs or complementarities, depending on the situation. The report brings to the surface problems that impede adoption of favourable policies, describing institutional and technological innovations that might help overcome these impediments.
Green wars : conservation and decolonization in the Maya forest
\"Green Wars challenges international conservation efforts, revealing through in-depth case studies how \"saving\" the Maya Forest facilitates racialized dispossession. Megan Ybarra brings Guatemala's 36-year civil war into the perspective of a longer history of 200 years of settler colonialism to show how conservation works to make Q'eqchi's into immigrants on their own territory. Even as the post-war state calls on them to claim rights as individual citizens, Q'eqchi's seek survival as a people. Her analysis reveals that Q'eqchi's both appeal to the nation-state and engage in relationships of mutual recognition with other Indigenous peoples -- and the land itself -- in their calls for a material decolonization.\"--Provided by publisher.
New JAXA High-Resolution Land Use/Land Cover Map for Vietnam Aiming for Natural Forest and Plantation Forest Monitoring
2020
Highly detailed and accurate forest maps are important for various applications including forest monitoring, forestry policy, climate change, and biodiversity loss. This study demonstrates a comprehensive and geographically transferable approach to produce a 12 category high-resolution land use/land cover (LULC) map over mainland Vietnam in 2016 by remote sensing data. The map included several natural forest categories (evergreen broadleaf, deciduous (mostly deciduous broadleaf), and coniferous (mostly evergreen coniferous)) and one category representing all popular plantation forests in Vietnam such as acacia (Acacia mangium, Acacia auriculiformis, Acacia hybrid), eucalyptus (Eucalyptus globulus), rubber (Hevea brasiliensis), and others. The approach combined the advantages of various sensor data by integrating their posterior probabilities resulting from applying a probabilistic classifier (comprised of kernel density estimation and Bayesian inference) to each datum individually. By using different synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images (PALSAR-2/ScanSAR, PALSAR-2 mosaic, Sentinel-1), optical images (Sentinel-2, Landsat-8) and topography data (AW3D30), the resultant map achieved 85.6% for the overall accuracy. The major forest classes including evergreen broadleaf forests and plantation forests had a user’s accuracy and producer’s accuracy ranging from 86.0% to 95.3%. Our map identified 9.55 × 106 ha (±0.16 × 106 ha) of natural forests and 3.89 × 106 ha (±0.11 × 106 ha) of plantation forests over mainland Vietnam, which were close to the Vietnamese government’s statistics (with differences of less than 8%). This study’s result provides a reliable input/reference to support forestry policy and land sciences in Vietnam.
Journal Article
The Lorax
by
Seuss, Dr
in
Pollution Juvenile fiction.
,
Conservation of natural resources Juvenile fiction.
,
Forest conservation Juvenile fiction.
2010
The Once-ler describes the results of the local pollution problem.
Predicting the Future Age Distribution of Conifer and Broad-Leaved Trees Based on Survival Analysis: A Case Study on Natural Forests in Northern Japan
by
Hiroshima, Takuya
,
Saito, Hideki
,
Takahashi, Masayoshi
in
Age composition
,
Analysis
,
Case studies
2022
Predicting future stand conditions based on tree age is crucial for natural forest management. The objective of this study was to model and predict the future age distribution of Picea jezoensis, Abies sachalinensis, and broad-leaved trees by assessing the past and current survival trends of preserved stands located at the University of Tokyo Hokkaido Forests (UTHF), Furano, Japan. This study analyzed forest census data of four plots (927 trees) in a preserved permanent area over 30 years (1989–2019). Individual tree-ring data were identified using a resistograph to determine the current tree age of the targeted trees. The predicted age distributions nearly converged to the shape of the survival probability curve. Among the scenario predictions, the multimodal age class distribution of P. jezoensis was predominant among all prediction scenarios. In contrast, the exponential shape of A sachalinensis and the age distribution of broad-leaved trees in the 100% scenario gradually shifted to the multimodal shape at the 50% scenario prediction. The species composition of conifer and broad-leaved trees and their age distribution would reach stable states in the long run by reaching a climax state. Therefore, it is theoretically possible to maintain stands under the pre-climax stage by allowing high growth rates at the stand level. The suggested age class-prediction of living and dead trees can improve the natural forest management of UTHF.
Journal Article
Biodiversity Differences between Managed and Unmanaged Forests: Meta-Analysis of Species Richness in Europe
by
BIJLSMA, RIENK-JAN
,
BERNHARDT-RÖMERMANN, MARKUS
,
MATESANZ, SILVIA
in
abandono de bosque manejado
,
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
,
Anthropogenic factors
2010
Past and present pressures on forest resources have led to a drastic decrease in the surface area of unmanaged forests in Europe. Changes in forest structure, composition, and dynamics inevitably lead to changes in the biodiversity of forest-dwelling species. The possible biodiversity gains and losses due to forest management (i.e., anthropogenic pressures related to direct forest resource use), however, have never been assessed at a pan-European scale. We used meta-analysis to review 49 published papers containing 120 individual comparisons of species richness between unmanaged and managed forests throughout Europe. We explored the response of different taxonomic groups and the variability of their response with respect to time since abandonment and intensity of forest management. Species richness was slightly higher in unmanaged than in managed forests. Species dependent on forest cover continuity, deadwood, and large trees (bryophytes, lichens, fungi, saproxylic beetles) and carabids were negatively affected by forest management. In contrast, vascular plant species were favored. The response for birds was heterogeneous and probably depended more on factors such as landscape patterns. The global difference in species richness between unmanaged and managed forests increased with time since abandonment and indicated a gradual recovery of biodiversity. Clearcut forests in which the composition of tree species changed had the strongest effect on species richness, but the effects of different types of management on taxa could not be assessed in a robust way because of low numbers of replications in the management-intensity classes. Our results show that some taxa are more affected by forestry than others, but there is a need for research into poorly studied species groups in Europe and in particular locations. Our meta-analysis supports the need for a coordinated European research network to study and monitor the biodiversity of different taxa in managed and unmanaged forests.
Journal Article
Fighting for the forest : how FDR's Civilian Conservation Corps helped save America
by
Pearson, P. O'Connell (Patricia O'Connell), author
in
Roosevelt, Franklin D. 1882-1945 Juvenile literature.
,
Roosevelt, Franklin D. 1882-1945.
,
Civilian Conservation Corps (U.S.) History Juvenile literature.
2019
\"The story of the Civilian Conservation Corps--one of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal projects that helped save a generation of Americans\"--Provided by publisher.
Ecological and socioeconomic effects of China's policies for ecosystem services
by
Chen, Xiaodong
,
Liu, Jianguo
,
Ouyang, Zhiyun
in
Agricultural land
,
Biological Sciences
,
Carbon sequestration
2008
To address devastating environmental crises and to improve human well-being, China has been implementing a number of national policies on payments for ecosystem services. Two of them, the Natural Forest Conservation Program (NFCP) and the Grain to Green Program (GTGP), are among the biggest programs in the world because of their ambitious goals, massive scales, huge payments, and potentially enormous impacts. The NFCP conserves natural forests through logging bans and afforestation with incentives to forest enterprises, whereas the GTGP converts cropland on steep slopes to forest and grassland by providing farmers with grain and cash subsidies. Overall ecological effects are beneficial, and socioeconomic effects are mostly positive. Whereas there are time lags in ecological effects, socioeconomic effects are more immediate. Both the NFCP and the GTGP also have global implications because they increase vegetative cover, enhance carbon sequestration, and reduce dust to other countries by controlling soil erosion. The future impacts of these programs may be even bigger. Extended payments for the GTGP have recently been approved by the central government for up to 8 years. The NFCP is likely to follow suit and receive renewed payments. To make these programs more effective, we recommend systematic planning, diversified funding, effective compensation, integrated research, and comprehensive monitoring. Effective implementation of these programs can also provide important experiences and lessons for other ecosystem service payment programs in China and many other parts of the world.
Journal Article