63 results
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2. Smoke-water effect on the germination of Amazonian tree species.
- Author
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Ferraz, I.D.K., Arruda, Y.M.B.C., and Van Staden, J.
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GERMINATION , *EFFECT of environment on plants , *PLANT species , *PLANT ecology , *PLANT water requirements , *EFFECT of smoke on plants - Abstract
Smoke stimulates seed germination of a range of species from ecosystems that may or may not be fire prone. We evaluated the effects of smoke-water on germination of ten tree species of economic value in the Amazon region. Two materials were burnt to produce smoke-water: germination paper and the wood of Cecropia palmata Willd. Seven dilutions of the solutions were tested. Seeds of nine forest trees were germinated under controlled laboratory conditions (25°C±2°C) in the laboratory. Bertholletia excelsa Humb. & Bonpl., was tested in the nursery (approximately 25–36°C) because of its large seeds. Irrespective of the material burned, smoke-water significantly increased seed germination of three species: Cordia goeldiana Hub., Ochroma pyramidale (Cav. ex Lam.) Urb. and Jacaranda copaia (Aubl.) D. Don. and there was a significant inhibitory effect on Swietenia macrophylla King. Germination was accelerated by smoke in J. copaia, B. excelsa and Bellucia grossularioides (L.) Triana. The most pronounced effect was observed in B. excelsa, as the mean germination time of 108d (control) was reduced to 76d with smoke-water made from germination paper (dilution of 1:25) and to 61d with the one from Cecropia wood (dilution of 1:250). For five of the ten species studied, smoke-water either increased or accelerated seed germination, irrespective of the materials used for its production. Seeds with low vigour and prolonged germination time seemed to be more receptive to smoke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Optimal estimation of Gaofen-3B satellite attitude deviation based on echo frequency domain features.
- Author
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Jiao, Hongchen, Li, Hailiang, Zhao, Liangbo, Xiao, Pengfei, Li, Yan, Wang, Tao, Zhang, Chi, Wen, Zhongkai, Zhang, Huan, Zhang, Qingjun, Wang, Beichao, and Li, Shuang
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MICROWAVE remote sensing , *SYNTHETIC aperture radar , *ORBITS of artificial satellites , *ATTITUDE testing , *LANDSAT satellites , *ARTIFICIAL satellite attitude control systems - Abstract
This paper proposed and verified an optimal estimation method of satellite attitude deviation in orbit based on the frequency domain features of microwave remote sensing data from the Gaofen-3B (GF-3B) satellite. The Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imaging results of the Amazon forest's strip pattern were obtained at different imaging incident angles of the GF-3B satellite. Then, the inversions of the Doppler center deviation of the SAR signal obtained the corresponding beam pointing errors at different imaging incident angles. Next, a three-degree-of-freedom nonlinear least square fitting model was established between the Doppler center deviation of the SAR signal and satellite attitude deviation. Combined with the measured SAR signals, satellite attitude deviations in different dimensions (pitch, yaw, and roll) were separated and estimated. On this basis, the GF-3B satellite proceeded with an on-orbit attitude correction test. The maximum Doppler center deviation at all imaging incident angles decreased from 400Hz to 46Hz, and the residual beam pointing errors were less than 0.01°. The proposed optimal estimation method can guarantee the on-orbit attitude deviation suppression and image quality improvement of the SAR satellites. • An optimal attitude deviations estimation method of SAR satellites is proposed based on the echo frequency domain features. • The fitting model of attitude deviations is established by combining microwave remote sensing imagery and orbit dynamics. • The proposed method has been used for the GF-3B satellite and verified by in-orbit imaging experiments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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4. Environmental and market determinants of economic orientation among rain forest communities: Evidence from a large-scale survey in western Amazonia.
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Coomes, Oliver T., Takasaki, Yoshito, Abizaid, Christian, and Arroyo-Mora, J. Pablo
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RAIN forest people , *RURAL poor , *ECONOMIC activity , *NATURAL resources ,ECONOMIC conditions of indigenous peoples - Abstract
Large scale surveys of rain forest livelihoods open up new possibilities for understanding the role of forest resources in the well-being of forest peoples but often overlook the factors that influence the diverse economic foci of forest-based communities. In this paper we describe the Peruvian Amazon Rural Livelihoods and Poverty (PARLAP) Project which seeks to identify the factors that contribute to rural poverty among indigenous and folk peoples through the first large scale survey conducted in this data poor region. Our paper draws upon a community census undertaken in four major river sub-basins in eastern Peru (n = 919 communities) and asks the question, how do environmental and market factors influence the economic orientation of rain forest communities? Recognizing that standard approaches that explain activity choice by current conditions are problematic because of potential endogeneity, we propose a new analytical framework that examines how historical (initial) conditions determine current conditions and thus current economic activities. Our approach produces a rich array of results that point to the importance of initial environmental endowments and market access of communities in shaping their economic orientation, interacting in different ways depending on the key natural resource upon which they rely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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5. Ecological rationality and environmental governance on the agrarian frontier: The role of religion in the Brazilian Amazon.
- Author
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Otsuki, Kei
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ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,LAND use ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CIVIL society ,RURAL development ,SOCIAL interaction ,LIBERTY - Abstract
Abstract: The conventional understanding of environmental governance implicitly assumes a priori presence of citizen rationality that underpins constitution of civil society vis-à-vis state. This assumption tends to overlook the economic and ecological consequences of social interactions through which people with diverse forms of rationality gradually produce distinction between state and society and shape environmental governance as an embedded process. This paper presents a case study of spontaneous settlers called posseiros in the south-east of the state of Pará in the Brazilian Amazon and examines ways that their social interactions lead to the so-called emancipation movements for municipal making on the agrarian frontier and open civic places in which environmental governance is negotiated. It pays particular attention to the role of religion, especially the Pentecostal Church of Assembly of God in relation to the traditional Catholic Church, in influencing the posseiros' ecological rationality and the articulation of emancipation movements and argues that the focus on religion sheds new light on the linkage between the environment, livelihoods and local governance. The paper concludes by discussing pragmatic implications of the case study for promoting sustainable rural development. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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6. Livelihood strategies in settlement projects in the Brazilian Amazon: Determining drivers and factors within the Agrarian Reform Program.
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Diniz, Fábio H., Hoogstra-Klein, Marjanke A., Kok, Kasper, and Arts, Bas
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LAND reform ,LAND settlement ,SMALL farms ,AGRICULTURAL productivity ,SURPLUS agricultural commodities ,LAND use - Abstract
Abstract: Over the last decades, hundreds of thousands of families have settled in the Brazilian Amazon within the framework of the Agrarian Reform Program (ARP). The rationale behind the program is to enable settlers to earn their living by small-scale farming and producing an agricultural surplus for the market. This paper aims to analyze the settlers' livelihood strategies under the framework of the ARP and its objectives. The paper considers more than just land use shares. Income composition, capital (human, physical, natural, social, and financial), mediating process, and context are also included, and these reveal three groups of livelihood strategies. Most of the settlers have achieved the ARP goals, mainly by deploying livestock strategies, particularly milk production. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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7. Representations and discourses: the role of local accounts and remote sensing in the formulation of Amazonia's environmental policy.
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Rajão, Raoni
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ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,REMOTE-sensing images ,TRANSPARENCY in government ,PRICE inflation ,POLICY sciences ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Abstract: This paper discusses the dynamics behind the establishment of scientific representations (e.g. reports, measurements, experiments) to the detriment of local representations (e.g. oral accounts, metaphors, symbols) in environmental policy-making in the Global South. To this end, the paper attempts to understand why local accounts of the Amazon in recent decades have gradually been replaced by satellite-based remote sensing (RS) technology in the region''s policy-making. RS technology is shown to provide representations that match policy-makers discourses as regards the importance of: visibility, since satellite images are believed to provide a transparent window from which the Amazon can be seen by policy-makers working from centres of power; comprehensiveness, since the data obtained through RS claims to represent the entire region; and determinacy, as forecasting and spatial correlation techniques establish deterministic links between particular factors (e.g. the presence of farmers, inflation) and environmental issues (e.g. increases in deforestation). From this examination, it is argued that rather than focusing on identifying the essential differences between local and scientific representation, more attention should be paid to how different kinds of representations are in harmony or conflict with historically rooted governance discourses. The article also indicates that in order to revalue local representations in environmental policy-making it is necessary to challenge particular discourses which are “taken-for-granted” in governance practices at the present time. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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8. Between structural change and local agency in the palm oil sector: Interactions, heterogeneities and landscape transformations in the Brazilian Amazon.
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Brandão, Frederico, de Castro, Fabio, and Futemma, Célia
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OIL palm ,SOCIAL sustainability ,PETROLEUM industry ,MIGRANT labor ,DISINVESTMENT ,FOCUS groups - Abstract
Looking beyond a normative analysis of oil palm expansion, this paper offers a nuanced analysis of landscape transformations in the Brazilian Amazonian region of Tomé-Açu. Based on quantitative and qualitative data deriving from interviews with key stakeholders, focus groups and surveys with smallholders and migrant workers, contextualized and cross-checked with observations between 2011 and 2017 and secondary sources, we discuss the processes and outcomes of Brazil's Sustainable Oil Palm Production Program (SPOPP). Despite its participatory component and innovative design, simultaneously tackling environmental, economic and social dimensions, the program underwent rapid structural change and suffered from discontinuity. A new boom and bust cycle emerged in the region, however, both "boom" and "bust" periods were marked by mixed outcomes. Notwithstanding the current governance shift characterized by absent state, reduced participation and disinvestment, local agency has been able to reorganize the sector on the ground and a transformed landscape emerged. However, under the current setting if expansion recommences there is no guarantee the sector will be able to avoid many of the socio-environmental problems experienced in the past. • SPOPP is an example of the emergence of participatory governance modes in the Brazilian Amazon. • SPOPP triggered a new boom and bust cycle in the researched region. • Outcomes of both cycles were mixed, from euphoria and criticism to disenchantment and reorganization. • Despite state withdrawal and reduced participatory governance the sector reconfigured under local and global drivers. • If expansion recommences there are several socio-environmental risks under the current governance shift. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. High resolution mapping of inundation area in the Amazon basin from a combination of L-band passive microwave, optical and radar datasets.
- Author
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Parrens, Marie, Bitar, Ahmad Al, Frappart, Frédéric, Paiva, Rodrogo, Wongchuig, Sly, Papa, Fabrice, Yamasaki, Dai, and Kerr, Yann
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OPTICAL radar , *SOIL moisture , *FLOODS , *WATER , *FLOODPLAINS , *DIGITAL elevation models - Abstract
• SWAF-HR data is new water surface extent product at 1 km over the Amazon basin from 2010 to 2016 every 3 days. • SWAF-HR provided from the fusion of three datasets: water surface fraction at coarse spatial resolution from an L-band passive microwave sensor (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity – SMOS), Global Surface Water Occurrence from Landsat (GSWO) and the Digital Elevation Model (DEM) Multi-Error-Removed-Terrain (MERIT) based on the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission. • The flooded area of the Branco floodplain (Roraima) varies from 0.2 times 104 to 2.7 × 104 km2 whereas the extent of the Bolivian floodplain (Llanos de Moxos) inundation ranges between 0.8 × 104 and 8.1 × 104 km2 during 2010–2016. • The choice of the DEM in the downscaling process introduces 5% of error in the instantaneous water surface extent estimate but can reach up to 10% in the flood probability estimations over seven years. • (MERIT) based on the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM). In this paper, we present a methodology to map inland water in tropical areas under dense vegetation at high spatial and temporal resolution using multi-source remote sensing data. A new inundation product (SWAF-HR) is presented. It is characterized by a high spatial resolution (30′, 1 km) and high temporal resolution (3 days). The SWAF-HR product is estimated over the Amazon basin for the 2010–2016 period. It is based on a downscaling procedure and the synergistic use of: (1) water surface fraction at coarse spatial resolution from an L-band passive microwave sensor (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity – SMOS), (2) Global Surface Water Occurrence from Landsat (GSWO) and (3) the Digital Elevation Model (DEM) Multi-Error-Removed-Improved-Terrain (MERIT) based on the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM). Thanks to the high capability of L-band microwave emission to reveal surface water under all-weather conditions and beneath the vegetation, the inundated area extent estimated by the SWAF-HR product is always larger than GSWO estimates obtained by the optical sensor (Landsat). SWAF-HR data is compared to ESA CCI and IGBP land covers, two SAR images and flooded areas over the Purus basin computed by the MGB-IPH model simulation. The results show the coherence of spatial and temporal dynamics of the SWAF-HR data. We show that the flooded area of the Branco River floodplain in Roraima (Brazil) varies from 0.2 × 104 to 2.7 × 104 km2 whereas the extent of the Bolivian floodplain (Llanos de Moxos) inundation ranges between 0.8 × 104 and 8.1 × 104 km2 during 2010–2016. The flooded area in the Branco floodplain gradually decreased from 2010 to 2015 but in 2016, the flooded area has increased during the rainy season. During 2010–2016, the minimum of the inundated surface extent was reached during 2015–2016 reflecting to a drought event related to ENSO. The most important uncertainties of the DEM are located over tropical areas but this information is essential in the downscaling procedure. Therefore, we investigate the impact of the choice of the DEM for the downscaling procedure. It is found that the choice of the DEM introduces 5% of error in the instantaneous water surface extent estimate but can reach up to 10% in the flood probability estimations over seven years. This new SWAF-HR product will be helpful for the understanding of the water, carbon and biogeochemical cycles of the Amazon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Trade-offs between food security and forest exploitation by mestizo households in Ucayali, Peruvian Amazon.
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Andrieu, N., Blundo-Canto, G., and Cruz-Garcia, G.S.
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FOOD security , *HOUSEHOLDS , *FOREST reserves , *AGRICULTURAL diversification , *AGRICULTURAL productivity , *FOREST conservation - Abstract
The Peruvian Amazon is undergoing rapid and uneven economic growth, alongside alarming rates of deforestation, increasing land use change and food security concerns. Although it has been widely acknowledged that food insecurity is intrinsically linked with deforestation, the links have not been thoroughly documented. The aim of this paper is to analyse the trade-offs and synergies between food security and forest exploitation at household level in mestizo communities in Ucayali, one of the regions with the highest deforestation rates in the Peruvian Amazon. To this end, 24 farmers were interviewed, surveys were conducted with a sample of 58 households, and an ad-hoc simulation modelling tool was developed and applied. Four main types of mestizo farming households were identified based on their crop and livestock diversity. For all farm types, the forest mainly represented a set aside area to support a potential increase in agricultural production. However, simulations showed that the different types of households, with different decision rules, lead to different rates of deforestation. The results of this study showed that the most diversified farming households presented the smallest trade-offs between food security and forest conservation, as they are the ones most likely to preserve the forest while ensuring their food security. • Whole farm simulation tools allow assessing the links between food security and forest exploitation. • In the mestizo communities of Ucayali gathering of forest fruits is minimal. • Farm diversification can support synergies between forest conservation and food security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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11. Doing it for Themselves: Direct Action Land Reform in the Brazilian Amazon
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Simmons, Cynthia, Walker, Robert, Perz, Stephen, Aldrich, Stephen, Caldas, Marcellus, Pereira, Ritaumaria, Leite, Flavia, Fernandes, Luiz Claudio, and Arima, Eugenio
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LAND reform , *DIRECT action , *HOUSEHOLD surveys , *SOCIAL movements , *WELFARE economics , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis - Abstract
Summary: The present paper considers a sometimes contentious process of land reform presently occurring in Brazil. This process, referred to in the paper as Direct Action Land Reform (DALR), involves organizations such as the Landless Rural Workers Movement (Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra, or MST) and more spontaneous actions of individuals desiring a piece of land for their own. Results of a survey covering 751 households engaged in such land reform actions in the Brazilian Amazon are presented, in order to describe participants and land reform processes. Evidently, social movement organizations provide for a modest degree of wealth accumulation, a welfare improvement that must be set against potential environmental costs. The paper concludes by calling attention to the challenge DALR may ultimately pose to the Brazilian state. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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12. Modelling sustainable international tourism demand to the Brazilian Amazon
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Divino, Jose Angelo and McAleer, Michael
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MATHEMATICAL models , *SUSTAINABLE development , *TOURISM , *FOREST economics , *ILLEGALITY , *LOGGING , *TIME series analysis - Abstract
Abstract: The Amazon rainforest is one of the world''s greatest natural wonders and holds great importance and significance for the world''s environmental balance. Around 60% of the Amazon rainforest is located in the Brazilian territory. The two biggest states of the Amazon region are Amazonas (the upper Amazon) and Pará (the lower Amazon), which together account for around 73% of the Brazilian Legal Amazon, and are the only states that are serviced by international airports in Brazil''s north region. The purpose of this paper is to model and forecast sustainable international tourism demand for the states of Amazonas, Pará, and the aggregate of the two states. By sustainable tourism is meant a distinctive type of tourism that has relatively low environmental and cultural impacts. Economic progress brought about by illegal wood extraction and commercial agriculture has destroyed large areas of the Amazon rainforest. The sustainable tourism industry has the potential to contribute to the economic development of the Amazon region without destroying the rainforest. The paper presents unit root tests for monthly and annual data, estimates alternative time series models and conditional volatility models of the shocks to international tourist arrivals, and provides forecasts for 2006 and 2007. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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13. Ranching and the new global range: Amazônia in the 21st century.
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Walker, Robert, Browder, John, Arima, Eugenio, Simmons, Cynthia, Pereira, Ritaumaria, Caldas, Marcellus, Shirota, Ricardo, and Zen, Sergio de
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RANCHING ,AGRICULTURAL development ,CATTLE ,SAVINGS ,POLITICAL ecology ,LAND reform ,ANIMAL health ,DEFORESTATION ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Abstract: This paper seeks to understand how the Brazilian Amazon, which many thought unsuitable for agricultural development, has yielded to a dynamic cattle economy in only a few decades. It does so by embedding the Thunian model of location rents within the regime of capital accumulation that has driven the Brazilian economy since the mid-20th century. The paper addresses policies that have created location rents in Amazônia, the effect of these rents on land managers, and the spatial implications of their behavior on forests. Thus, the paper connects macro-processes and structures to agents on the ground, in providing a political ecological explanation relevant to land change science. The policy discussion focuses on reductions in transportation costs, improvements in animal health, and monetary and trade reforms. To illustrate the impact of policy, the paper presents data on the geography of Amazonian herd expansion, on the growth of Amazonian exports, and on the profitability of the region’s cattle economy. It follows the empirical presentation with more abstract consideration of the spatial relations between cattle ranching and soy farming, and implications for deforestation. The paper concludes on a speculative note by considering the likelihood of forest transition in the region, given the transformation of Amazônia into a global resource frontier. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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14. Forty days and forty nights: A biocultural perspective on postpartum practices in the Amazon
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Piperata, Barbara Ann
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POSTPARTUM depression , *LACTATION & nutrition , *FASTING , *MOTHERS , *CROSS-cultural studies , *MATERNITY leave , *QUANTITATIVE research , *SOCIAL attitudes , *SOCIAL medicine , *MATERNAL health services , *TABOO , *PSYCHOLOGY , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Abstract: The immediate postpartum period is recognized as a special time in many societies and is commonly associated with food and work restrictions. The logic of food restrictions during a period of increased energy and protein needs has been challenged, but few data are available to test the impact of these practices on the diets of lactating women. In the eastern Amazon the immediate postpartum period is referred to as resguardo, lasts for 40–41 days and includes food taboos and work restrictions. Taking a biocultural perspective, this paper combines data on the beliefs and attitudes surrounding the practice of resguardo with quantitative data on the actual dietary intakes and activity patterns of a cohort of 23 lactating women followed from birth through 15 months postpartum. This paper addresses three topics: (1) shared ideals regarding resguardo; (2) adherence to food and work restrictions; and (3) the impact of these practices on women''s dietary intakes and energy expenditure. The results show that the majority of women adhered to food taboos and work restrictions. During resguardo energy expenditure in physical activity was lower, reducing women''s energy needs and allowing them to devote more time to infant care. However, energy intakes were also lower. The reduction in dietary intake was impacted more by work restrictions and the loss of women in subsistence tasks during resguardo than by adherence to food taboos. In addition to altering maternal energetic strategies, resguardo served an important social function by reinforcing bonds and, for young women, marking the transition to womanhood. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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15. Towards zero deforestation and forest restoration in the Amazon region of Maranhão state, Brazil.
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Celentano, Danielle, Rousseau, Guillaume X., Muniz, Francisca Helena, Varga, István Van Deursen, Martinez, Carlos, Carneiro, Marcelo Sampaio, Miranda, Magda V.c., Barros, Márcia N.r., Freitas, Luciana, Narvaes, Igor Da Silva, Adami, Marcos, Gomes, Alessandra Rodrigues, Rodrigues, Jane C., and Martins, Marlúcia B.
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RAIN forests ,DEFORESTATION ,FOREST restoration ,ECOLOGICAL zones ,ECONOMIC zoning - Abstract
The Amazon forest in the state of Maranhão ensures ecosystem services that directly and indirectly affect the life quality of its population and economy, via hydrologic and climatic regulation, among other benefits. Currently, only 25% of the original forest cover (24.7 thousand km 2 ) remains while illegal deforestation persists in a violent process that provokes visible social, economic and environmental harm. Simultaneously, Maranhão has seen record levels of burning, faces a water shortage and fights against the worst social and economic indicators in the country. Conversely, secondary vegetation covers 19.9 thousand km 2 (27% of deforested area) and is completely unprotected. Contrary to the international commitments assumed by Brazil to combat deforestation and restore forests, some of the political representatives of Maranhão have sought legal mechanisms to further diminish forest cover in public and private areas. To promote the conservation and restoration of Maranhão Amazon Forest, a multi-institutional network of researchers was established in 2015. This viewpoint paper aims to draw attention to this endangered region of the Brazilian Amazon and give science-oriented recommendations to policy makers in order to avoid more setbacks. We argue that Maranhão state must urgently establish a policy of Zero Deforestation, protect secondary forests and comply with the national forest restoration policy, thus ensuring long-term economic sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Multidimensional forests: Complexity of forest-based values and livelihoods across Amazonian socio-cultural and geopolitical contexts.
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Londres, Marina, Schmink, Marianne, Börner, Jan, Duchelle, Amy E., and Frey, Gabriel Ponzoni
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FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST economics , *INCOME , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
• The research combines economic, historical and anthropological data on the role of forests in local livelihoods in three South American countries. • Results showed the strong economic importance of forests to Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples, despite different contexts and histories. • Non-economic values of forests were also remarkably strong among Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples inhabiting forests for varied time scales. • The utilitarian notion behind nature valuation is not sufficient to comprehensively understand how local populations benefit from forests. • Development policies should support and leverage non-economic forest values and cosmologies, and provide sustainable economic alternatives. Research on the contribution of forests to local livelihoods has so far had a strong focus on quantifying the monetary value of forest-derived products and services. In this paper, we move beyond monetary valuation and integrate the less tangible and sometimes culturally complex dimensions through which forests support local livelihoods. We look at four local contexts in the Brazilian, Bolivian and Ecuadorian Amazon, which differ markedly in terms of their biophysical, sociocultural and geopolitical settings. Combining economic and anthropological data, we used quantitative and qualitative methods, and measures of the ecological impacts of local forest uses. Quantitative analyses drew on datasets from 48 communities, and 510 households, while the qualitative analyses relied on semi-structured interviews with 78 families in 22 communities. Forest-based livelihoods exhibited complex portfolios, diversified production systems, seasonal variation of activities, and different specialization strategies. Beyond a source of subsistence and cash incomes, forests were locally valued by people across all sites in terms of identities, worldviews, territorial attachment, governance, and conservation. Populations with a longer history of interactions with the environment displayed more complex forest-related cultural systems, but even among people who had migrated into the forest in a more recent historical period, forest-based self-cultural identification was evident. At all sites, forests were unanimously recognized as critical to people's health and wellbeing, despite substantial differences in local histories, policy and market environments. The findings underscore the persistent importance of non-economic values of forests as both Indigenous and non-Indigenous groups constantly adapt their forest and land use practices based on transcultural exchange and changing conditions. A focus on economic value as the rationale for forest conservation disregards the striking resilience of cultural values in promoting forest conservation and use by diverse local and Indigenous communities, especially when supported by favorable policies and markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. A reassessment of the suspended sediment load in the Madeira River basin from the Andes of Peru and Bolivia to the Amazon River in Brazil, based on 10 years of data from the HYBAM monitoring programme.
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Vauchel, Philippe, Santini, William, Guyot, Jean Loup, Moquet, Jean Sébastien, Martinez, Jean Michel, Espinoza, Jhan Carlo, Baby, Patrice, Fuertes, Oscar, Noriega, Luis, Puita, Oscar, Sondag, Francis, Fraizy, Pascal, Armijos, Elisa, Cochonneau, Gérard, Timouk, Franck, De Oliveira, Eurides, Filizola, Naziano, Molina, Jorge, and Ronchail, Josyane
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ANALYSIS of river sediments , *RIVER sediment sampling , *GEOMORPHOLOGY , *MARINE ecology - Abstract
The Madeira River is the second largest tributary of the Amazon River. It contributes approximately 13% of the Amazon River flow and it may contribute up to 50% of its sediment discharge to the Atlantic Ocean. Until now, the suspended sediment load of the Madeira River was not well known and was estimated in a broad range from 240 to 715 Mt yr −1 . Since 2002, the HYBAM international network developed a new monitoring programme specially designed to provide more reliable data than in previous intents. It is based on the continuous monitoring of a set of 11 gauging stations in the Madeira River watershed from the Andes piedmont to the confluence with the Amazon River, and discrete sampling of the suspended sediment concentration every 7 or 10 days. This paper presents the results of the suspended sediment data obtained in the Madeira drainage basin during 2002–2011. The Madeira River suspended sediment load is estimated at 430 Mt yr −1 near its confluence with the Amazon River. The average production of the Madeira River Andean catchment is estimated at 640 Mt yr −1 (±30%), the corresponding sediment yield for the Andes is estimated at 3000 t km −2 yr −1 (±30%), and the average denudation rate is estimated at 1.20 mm yr −1 (±30%). Contrary to previous results that had mentioned high sedimentation rates in the Beni River floodplain, we detected no measurable sedimentation process in this part of the basin. On the Mamoré River basin, we observed heavy sediment deposition of approximately 210 Mt yr −1 that seem to confirm previous studies. But while these studies mentioned heavy sedimentation in the floodplain, we showed that sediment deposition occurred mainly in the Andean piedmont and immediate foreland in rivers (Parapeti, Grande, Pirai, Yapacani, Chimoré, Chaparé, Secure, Maniqui) with discharges that are not sufficiently large to transport their sediment load downstream in the lowlands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The impact of deforestation, urbanization, public investments, and agriculture on human welfare in the Brazilian Amazonia.
- Author
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Silva, José Maria Cardoso da, Prasad, Shivangi, and Diniz-Filho, José Alexandre Felizola
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URBANIZATION & the environment ,DEFORESTATION ,PUBLIC investments ,HUMANITARIANISM - Abstract
The relationship between human welfare and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazonia has traditionally been thought to follow a boom-and-bust pattern. According to this pattern, forest clearing triggers rapid increases in human welfare levels (“the boom”) due to short-term economic gains; these levels then drop to below national or regional averages (“the bust”) after the forest stocks have declined, thus causing the local populations to become deprived of ecosystem services. However, recent studies have questioned the validity of this boom-and-bust pattern. In this paper, we use panel data and simultaneous autoregressive models to evaluate the effects of deforestation, urbanization, public investments, agriculture, and state policies on temporal changes in human welfare that occurred across multiple municipalities in the Brazilian Amazonia from 2005 to 2012, a period during which governments implemented a set of strategies aimed at controlling deforestation across the region. We found that: (a) signals of a boom-and-bust pattern are weak at the regional level, and therefore this pattern cannot be generalized across the entire region; (b) human welfare is increasing more rapidly in low-development municipalities than in high-development cities, and all municipalities are converging on at least one regional average rather than on a national average; (c) urbanization does not lead to positive changes in human welfare, which indicates that the infrastructure available in regional urban centers is limited; (d) public investments are negatively associated with human welfare growth, thus signifying that if public investments are not used to leverage the potential of other sectors of the local economy, human welfare will not improve; (e) agriculture is negatively associated with positive changes in human welfare at the local level, possibly due to the dominance of cattle-ranching as the predominant economic activity of this sector; and (f) state-level policies matter, and future analyses of regional trends in the realm of development and conservation across this region should take such policies into account. Finally, we suggest that although human welfare and deforestation retain a weak statistical relationship, we cannot contend that they have been fully decoupled. Forest loss across the region is still pervasive, and institutions are too weak to sustain the transition from a frontier development model to a conservation-centered model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Participatory Uses of Geospatial Technologies to Leverage Multiple Knowledge Systems within Development Contexts: A Case Study from the Peruvian Amazon.
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Young, Jason and Gilmore, Michael
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GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *THEORY of knowledge , *DEMOCRACY , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,INDIGENOUS peoples of Peru - Abstract
Summary Participatory approaches have proven effective at producing more inclusive and democratic forms of development, in which marginalized groups are given increased recognition. However, these approaches can also reinforce social hierarchies and political exclusion if they are not developed and implemented carefully. In particular, participatory approaches can be problematic if they too simplistically conceptualize democratic engagement as the folding of individuals into pre-existing governance structures. Utilizing a combination of feminist and postcolonial theories, this paper argues that practitioners of participatory methods must extend their thinking to the ways in which their projects foster engagement across multiple social and epistemological perspectives. Participatory geographic information systems (PGIS) methodologies are particularly effective at enabling these cross-perspectival engagements—geospatial technologies have unique capabilities for storing and visualizing knowledge from different types of knowledge systems. These different forms of knowledge can not only be visualized as multi-facetted and multi-scalar layers, but they can be directly placed in conversation with one another within the space of the map. In this way, they can be used to fundamentally transform historically unjust governance practices, rather than simply folding new subjects into unjust political structures. The authors examine these claims in the context of a case study with the Maijuna indigenous group of the northeastern Peruvian Amazon. The authors collaborated with the Maijuna to create and use a digital, spatial database to influence policy decisions about land tenure and environmental management. We show that geospatial technologies were uniquely capable of encouraging dialog and integration across indigenous, Western scientific, and state-based perspectives of the Amazon. These technologies are particularly effective at empowering traditionally marginalized perspectives within governance processes. This project therefore offers lessons about the benefits and dangers of geospatial technologies and methodologies for improving the democratic potential of development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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20. Transboundary fisheries management in the Amazon: Assessing current policies for the management of the ornamental silver arawana (Osteoglossum bicirrhosum).
- Author
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Guzmán Maldonado, Adriana, Macedo Lopes, Priscila Fabiana, Rodríguez Fernández, Carlos Alberto, Lasso Alcala, Carlos Andrés, and Sumalia, Ussif Rashid
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FISHERY management ,OSTEOGLOSSUM ,FISH stocking ,ORNAMENTAL fishes ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The management and governance of shared stocks have long been identified as a challenge to achieve long-term sustainability in fisheries. This is the situation of fisheries in the Amazon basin, a region shared by nine countries. This paper provides an overview of the social-ecological outcomes and management implications of sharing fish stocks among countries with different public policies, taking the valuable Amazonian ornamental silver arawana ( Osteoglossum bicirrhosum ) trade as a case study. Specifically, it (i) presents and discusses the policies of Colombia, Peru and Brazil for the silver arawana fishery, and how these are conducive for the successful management of this shared transboundary fishery; and (ii) analyzes the market for the ornamental silver arawana and how it affects the ability to sustainably manage the fishery. The interplay between the multiple environmental, economic and social dimensions involved in the ornamental silver arawana fishery affects the sustainability of this species even in Brazil, where this fishing is forbidden but still illegally caught by Colombians and Peruvians. Among the factors that make fisheries policies inefficient in this region are: (i) incongruent policies between the countries and institutions with low organizational capacity to accomplish the established policies; (ii) environmental heterogeneity of Amazonian aquatic systems, which requires local and adaptive measures; and (iii) complex socio-economic relationships in the live-fish trade business. Legally binding efforts to reduce problems derived from shared fish stocks are an urgent need and should be addressed by the multilateral organizations created for the Amazonian sustainable development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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21. Population densities and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon: New insights on the current human settlement patterns.
- Author
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Tritsch, Isabelle and Le Tourneau, François-Michel
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POPULATION density , *DEFORESTATION , *HUMAN settlements , *GEOGRAPHICAL research , *DATA analysis , *RANCHING - Abstract
This paper provides the first analysis at the sub-municipality scale of the relationships between population densities and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon between 2000 and 2010. We use the database on deforestation published by the Brazilian space research center (INPE) and the population census data released by the federal geographical and statistical agency IBGE at their finest scale: the census tract level. By crossing the population density and deforestation variables, we identify ten human settlement patterns in the Amazon. There are low-low and high-high classes of population density and deforestation, but also low-high and high-low classes. This analysis helps understand the low overall relations in the Amazon for population and deforestation. We emphasize the expansion of large-scale agriculture and cattle ranching as causing the depopulation of rural areas while in many regions of the Amazon quite strong population densities coexist with relatively low extents of deforestation. Such findings stress the need to implement case-specific public policies in these regions in order to encourage human presence compatible with the conservation of forest cover and biodiversity. We also confirm the importance of the Amazon urbanization process, including the ‘discrete urbanization’ of rural areas, and the need to better recognize the distinct social and environmental problems of urban areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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22. Dynamics and spatial aspects of erodibility in Indian Black Earth in the Amazon, Brazil.
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Brito, Wildson Benedito Mendes, Campos, Milton César Costa, de Brito Filho, Elilson Gomes, de Lima, Alan Ferreira Leite, Cunha, José Maurício, da Silva, Lucivania Izidoro, dos Santos, Luís Antônio Coutrim, and Mantovanelli, Bruno Campos
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SOIL erosion prediction , *HUMUS , *SOIL erosion , *SOIL particles , *CHERNOZEM soils , *PARTICLE size determination - Abstract
• This paper was to characterize the dynamics and spatial aspects of erodibility. • Texture governs higher or lower loss rates according to grain size. • Cultivated IBEs exhibit moderate to high soil loss rates, mainly by runoff. • Texture and organic matter control susceptibility to water erosion in IBEs. • Erodibility factors showed spatial dynamics moderately influenced by relief. Soil erosion generally causes environmental and economic damage to agricultural systems, representing one of the biggest management problems for agriculture. Therefore, understanding the behavior of the erosive process is indispensable for the diagnosis of best conservationist practices of use and management of agricultural resources. The aim of this paper was to characterize the dynamics and spatial aspects of erodibility, its indicators and to evaluate the applicability of the prediction equations of soil loss proposed by Denardin (1990) and Flanagan and Livingston (1995) for cultivated and natural Indian Black Earths (IBEs). Grids with 88 georeferenced sampling points were established for soil sampling at a depth of 0.0–0.20 m. Laboratory analyzes were performed to determine soil particle size and soil organic matter (SOM) analysis. The erodibility factors were calculated and applied univariate analysis, geostatistics and multivariate techniques. Cultivated IBEs exhibit moderate to high soil loss rates even in low slope relief, mainly by runoff. The dynamics of the erodibility factors behave under moderate spatial dependence between the attributes, with high range values and moderate relief influence, indicating high spatial variability, showing the tendency of values of soil losses similar to distances between 15 and 69 m. However, texture and organic matter were the main indicators of erodibility, since medium texture IBEs tend to increase the global and interril erodibility values, and under sandy texture tend to increase erodibility in gully. The increase in SOM elevates erodibility and interril due to the high amount of pyrogenic coal with high capacity to retain water. Therefore, we recommend the adoption of management practices that reduce erosion processes, and mainly avoid the loss of mineralized SOM to maintain crop sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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23. A cost path and network analysis methodology to calculate distances along a complex river network in the Peruvian Amazon.
- Author
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Webster, K., Arroyo-Mora, J.P., Coomes, O.T., Takasaki, Y., and Abizaid, C.
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NETWORK analysis (Planning) , *PERUVIANS , *TRANSPORTATION , *ROADS , *NATURAL resources - Abstract
Distance is a key variable in explicating environmental, social, and economic conditions and in defining spatial and temporal patterns. Prior research has primarily focused on using simple to complex algorithms for calculating distances along road networks. In contrast, few algorithms are available for distance calculations along fluvial networks which are often more erratic, divergent and transient than road networks. Fluvial transportation is relied upon worldwide, particularly in developing regions, where communities use river networks for transportation, access to natural resources and for trade and commerce. This paper presents a methodology developed for mapping complex fluvial networks for travel distance analysis. The methodology was applied in four major river basins in western Amazonia over some 35,000 km of river length and incorporating 919 communities as origins/destinations. A cost path and network analysis methodology was created using vector and raster datasets in a Geographic Information System (GIS) to assess interactions among communities and the distances traveled by river to reach district capitals, major urban centres and marketplaces. An accuracy assessment using distance values calculated from a previous study using a different methodological approach in the region as well as Google Earth Pro, found a high degree of concordance for distance calculations. Our methodology creates a very flexible approach for complex river systems that can be use to calculate river distances in an adaptive and efficient manner and that can be use in other regions of the world where rural communities must rely on rivers for transportation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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24. Return on investment of the ecological infrastructure in a new forest frontier in Brazilian Amazonia.
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Dias, Teresa Cristina Albuquerque de Castro, Cunha, Alan Cavalcanti da, and Silva, José Maria Cardoso da
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ENVIRONMENTAL infrastructure , *PROTECTED areas , *RATE of return , *FOREST ecology - Abstract
Protected areas anchor the ecological infrastructure that societies need for long-term prosperity and provide benefits to local, national, and global stakeholders. However, these areas continue to go unfunded. In this paper, we have provided the first estimate of the return on investment for nine large protected areas that compose the core of the ecological infrastructure of the State of Amapá, which is located in a new forest frontier in Brazilian Amazonia. These nine protected areas will require US $147.2 million over five years in order to be established and then US $32.7 million in annual recurrent costs. If implemented, these nine protected areas have the potential to contribute at least US $362.4 million per year in benefits (timber, non-timber forest products, nature-based tourism, fisheries, and carbon) to the local economy. The return on investment (ROI) of these protected areas will be 1.6% during the first five years and 10% thereafter; however, ROI could reach 45.8% or more if option and non-use values are also included as benefits. Although the costs of establishing the protected area system in Amapá are higher (US $3.2–3.5 ha − 1 y − 1 ) than the costs reported in other tropical forest regions (US $0.2–0.4 ha − 1 y − 1 ), the investments required are within the reach of both state and national governments. Our study shows that if fully implemented, protected areas can become engines for socio-economic upliftment, making the conservation-centered development model a feasible option for most of the world's new forest frontiers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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25. Effects of Protected Areas on Forest Cover Change and Local Communities: Evidence from the Peruvian Amazon.
- Author
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Miranda, Juan José, Corral, Leonardo, Blackman, Allen, Asner, Gregory, and Lima, Eirivelthon
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- *
PROTECTED areas , *FORESTS & forestry , *COMMUNITIES , *FOREST conservation , *TWENTY-first century , *CONSERVATION & restoration , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
Summary Protected areas are a cornerstone of forest conservation in developing countries. Yet little is known about their effects on forest cover change or the socioeconomic status of local communities. This paper assesses whether “win–win” scenarios are possible—that is, whether protected areas can both stem forest cover change and alleviate poverty. We examine protected areas in the Peruvian Amazon during the early 2000s. We find that protected areas reduce deforestation. We do not find a robust effect on poverty. Protected areas that allow sustainable extractive activities are more effective in reducing deforestation but less effective in reducing poverty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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26. The tropical biomass & carbon project–An application for forest biomass and carbon estimates.
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David, Hassan C., Barbosa, Reinaldo I., Vibrans, Alexander C., Watzlawick, Luciano F., Trautenmuller, Jonathan W., Balbinot, Rafaelo, Ribeiro, Sabina C., Jacovine, Laércio A.G., Corte, Ana Paula D., Sanquetta, Carlos R., Silva, Alessandra Calegari da, Freitas, Joberto Veloso de, and MacFarlane, David W.
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FOREST biomass , *WEB-based user interfaces , *MOBILE apps , *BIOMASS , *CARBON , *CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
• The project 'Tropical Biomass & Carbon' and its main product TB&C App is introduced. • TB&C App is an user-friendly tool that estimates C stored in forests of Brazil. • Model performance analysis proved reliability >95% of the TB&C App's models. • Carbon in Amazonian forests can be accurately and precisely estimated. • A dataset containing 64,000 plots with forest variables is delivered as supplement. This article introduces the Tropical Biomass & Carbon Application – the 'TB&C App', a web application available on the permanent link www.tropicalbiomass.com. The TB&C App requires as input attributes 'the smallest and largest diameters', 'number of trees ha−1', basal area ha−1, and 'parameters of the diameter (beta) distribution' describing stand structure. The App delivers outputs at two levels: (1) Stand level, including mean aboveground biomass (AGB) and carbon (AGC), in Mg ha−1, along with confidence intervals (CIs) as measures of uncertainty, and; (2) Tree level estimates, with AGB and diameter for every simulated tree. Phase 1 of the project TB&C comprises four Brazilian forest (and non-forest) formations: Campinarana, Floresta estacional, Floresta ombrofila , and Savana. This article aims to (i) describe the algorithm written for the TB&C App, and (ii) present results of Phase 1. This first phase counts on a standardized database of 1,428 trees with field-measured dry AGB, from plots across the different formations, which is the largest tree-biomass database compiled so far in Brazil. Model uncertainties were incorporated into the modeling process, allowing computation of CIs through an uncertainty approach. The total variance of residuals of AGB was also modeled, aiming at predicting CIs as a function of the quantity of AGB. An analysis of reliability of the equations implemented in the TB&C App indicates that more than 95% (n = 64,000) of the true AGB's fit into the CI outputted by the TB&C App. A comparison with other approaches in the literature shows significant agreement with previous estimates and more conservative estimates where previously-published estimates disagreed with the TB&C App. We cite as advantages of the TB&C App; (i) reliability of the outputs, (ii) a user-friendly layout, (iii) AGB and AGC estimates provided along with robust CIs, and (iv) estimates at the stand and tree levels with consistent totals. A biomass dataset containing information on 64,000 plots is also delivered as supplement of this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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27. Empirical models for estimating the suspended sediment concentration in Amazonian white water rivers using Landsat 5/TM.
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Montanher, Otávio C., Novo, Evlyn M.L.M., Barbosa, Cláudio C.F., Rennó, Camilo D., and Silva, Thiago S.F.
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- *
SEDIMENTS , *GEOLOGY , *LANDSAT satellites , *ARTIFICIAL satellites - Abstract
Suspended sediment yield is a very important environmental indicator within Amazonian fluvial systems, especially for rivers dominated by inorganic particles, referred to as white water rivers. For vast portions of Amazonian rivers, suspended sediment concentration (SSC) is measured infrequently or not at all. However, remote sensing techniques have been used to estimate water quality parameters worldwide, from which data for suspended matter is the most successfully retrieved. This paper presents empirical models for SSC retrieval in Amazonian white water rivers using reflectance data derived from Landsat 5/TM. The models use multiple regression for both the entire dataset (global model, N = 504) and for five segmented datasets (regional models) defined by general geological features of drainage basins. The models use VNIR bands, band ratios, and the SWIR band 5 as input. For the global model, the adjusted R 2 is 0.76, while the adjusted R 2 values for regional models vary from 0.77 to 0.89, all significant ( p -value < 0.0001). The regional models are subject to the leave-one-out cross validation technique, which presents robust results. The findings show that both the average error of estimation and the standard deviation increase as the SSC range increases. Regional models were more accurate when compared with the global model, suggesting changes in optical proprieties of water sampled at different sampling stations. Results confirm the potential for the estimation of SSC from Landsat/TM historical series data for the 1980s and 1990s, for which the in situ database is scarce. Such estimates supplement the SSC temporal series, providing a more comprehensive SSC temporal series which may show environmental dynamics yet unknown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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28. Complex Tenure and Deforestation: Implications for Conservation Incentives in the Ecuadorian Amazon.
- Author
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Holland, Margaret B., de Koning, Free, Morales, Manuel, Naughton-Treves, Lisa, Robinson, Brian E., and Suárez, Luis
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DEFORESTATION , *FOREST conservation , *COMMONS , *FOREST protection , *MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
Summary: This paper analyzes deforestation in areas of overlapping land tenure in the northern Ecuadorian Amazon. We use a random coefficients model to test for differences in forest cover across tenure forms over time. Tenure categories are significantly associated with changes in deforestation, even after controlling for multiple factors. Deforestation slows dramatically in the latter time period; and model results link parks with reduced deforestation. The same is true for lands where indigenous territories overlap with forest protection. Our results suggest that Ecuador’s conservation incentive program could refine its targeting by focusing on indigenous areas and communal lands outside of parks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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29. Global versus local narratives of REDD: A case study from Peru's Amazon.
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Evans, Kristen, Murphy, Laura, and de Jong, Wil
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DEFORESTATION ,FOREST degradation ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,COMMUNITY forests ,MONETARY incentives ,CLIMATE change mitigation - Abstract
Abstract: This paper seeks to analyze local perspectives in Peruvian Amazon forest communities toward REDD and contrast those perspectives with current global and national REDD narratives. REDD is a global market-based approach to provide financial incentives for local actors to halt deforestation or to improve carbon stocks. To date, the REDD framework has not demonstrated that it is equipped to incorporate the diverse perspectives, potential interactions and uncertainties facing forest communities. We interviewed forest community members in the Amazonian state of Loreto, Peru, using “future scenarios” methods to elicit potential alternative narratives, both with and outside REDD. Indigenous voices reveal ambiguous attitudes toward REDD with regard to livelihoods, benefit distribution and the long-term impacts for communities and forests. They reveal considerable uncertainty about the future and lack of trust in governance regimes. Long-term community priorities were in generating work, providing educational opportunities for their children, and improving the quality of their forest. Conflict—within the community, with local loggers and with the recently established regional conservation area—was a prevalent theme. A REDD design that recognizes communities as active participants in global and national climate management and pays attention to local narratives will more likely generate the multiple benefits of healthy forests, strong communities and, ultimately, global climate change mitigation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
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30. Sustainable conversion of Brazilian Amazon kaolin mining waste to zinc-based Linde Type A zeolites with antibacterial activity.
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Schwanke, Anderson Joel, Silveira, Deborah Regina, Saorin Puton, Bruna Maria, Cansian, Rogério Luis, and Bernardo-Gusmão, Katia
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- *
KAOLIN , *MINE waste , *ZEOLITES , *LISTERIA monocytogenes , *ANTIBACTERIAL agents , *X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy , *NUCLEAR magnetic resonance - Abstract
Kaolin is a clay mineral with several applications, especially as filler in the paper industry. Brazil has the largest kaolin processing plant in the world located in the Amazon region. Kaolin mining activities generate high volumes of waste, resulting in additional costs and environmental impacts, and therefore, new approaches for their reduction are necessary. This work elucidates, for the first time, the technological valorization of abundant Amazon Brazilian kaolin mining waste to synthesize pure-phase zeolitic material with the antibacterial application. For the synthesis optimization, it was evaluated the influence of the type of kaolin (natural or thermally treated at 600 °C), the crystallization period (4, 6 and 24 h), the suppression of aluminum source (sodium aluminate) and the zinc ion-exchanging procedure. The materials were characterized by various techniques including powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), aluminum nuclear magnetic resonance with magic-angle spinning (27Al MAS NMR) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), N 2 adsorption/desorption isotherms, chemical analysis, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), infrared spectroscopy (IR) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The results reveal that it is possible to direct the synthesis to the different zeolite structure with simple thermal treatment of the raw material, obtaining crystalline Linde Type A (LTA) or sodalite (SOD) zeolites using thermally treated or natural kaolin, respectively. Under the optimized synthesis conditions, the LTA zeolite was obtained after rapid crystallization in 6 h and without commercial aluminum supplementation. The Zn-exchanged LTA zeolites containing 4 and 7 wt% of Zn were applied as antibacterial materials. They presented growth inhibition zones between 7 and 8 mm for Gram-positive bacteria (Listeria monocytogenes and Staphylococcus aureus) and Gram-negative bacteria (Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica) while pure kaolin and LTA zeolite without Zn did not show antibacterial activity. These results offer new opportunities on the way that kaolin-mining industries manage their wastes. [Display omitted] • Pure kaolin led to obtaining pure-phase SOD-type zeolite. • Thermally treated kaolin led to obtaining pure-phase LTA-type zeolite. • The zinc-LTA exhibited activity against gram-positive bacteria (L monocytogenes and S. aureus). • The zinc-LTA exhibited activity against gram-negative bacteria (E.coli and S. choleraesuis). • The zinc-LTA exhibited growth inhibition zones between 7 and 8 mm for all studied bacteria. Abstract: [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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31. Winds of fire and smoke: Air pollution and health in the Brazilian Amazon.
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Rocha, Rudi and Sant'Anna, André Albuquerque
- Subjects
- *
AIR pollution , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of smoke , *CHILDREN'S health , *RESPIRATORY diseases , *HEALTH of older people , *FIRE - Abstract
• Air pollution in the Brazilian Amazon leads to increases in hospitalization rates. • Adverse effects are concentrated in respiratory conditions. • Effects are higher among children and the elderly. • Effects increase non-linearly with air pollution levels. • There are negative externalities related to deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon. In this paper we assess the effects of fire-related air pollution on population health in the Brazilian Amazon. Our empirical strategy is based on a municipality-by-month fixed effects model, coupled with an instrumental variables approach that explores wind direction and air pollution in surrounding areas in order to exogenously shift exposure to air pollution at the locality. We find that exposure to air pollution, measured by PM2.5 concentration levels, is robustly associated with an increase in hospital admissions for respiratory conditions. The effects are higher among children and the elderly, and increase non-linearly with pollution levels. Our benchmark estimates indicate that an increase of one standard deviation in PM2.5 is related to an increase of 1.5% of the monthly hospitalization rate for respiratory conditions. The latter estimate reaches 14% if monthly average PM2.5 crosses thresholds as high as 75 μ g/m3. We do not observe significant effects on hospitalization rates related to other health conditions nor on mortality rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
32. State-led social and environmental policy failure in a Brazilian forest frontier: Sustainable Development Project in Anapu, Pará.
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Porro, Roberto and Porro, Noemi Sakiara Miyasaka
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SUSTAINABLE development ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SOCIAL policy ,FORESTS & forestry ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,PEASANTS ,SOCIAL justice ,INTEGRITY - Abstract
In this paper we analyze transformations within a land reform settlement in the Brazilian Amazon, with special land-use regulations targeting forest conservation. We conducted long-term action research in the Virola-Jatobá Sustainable Development Project (PDS), where peasant farmers who were the early settlers of the area, and more recent occupants allied to illegal loggers, land grabbers and speculators adopt antagonistic positions and challenge respective entitlements towards land and forest. In this research we highlight issues of power asymmetry and social injustice when assessing how social relations and environmental conditions in the study area are affected by land use and forest conservation policies since year 2000, when the scheme was established. The PDS situation approached a collapse in late 2017 when the integrity of its forests and the beliefs and practices of vulnerable local residents were damaged. This case study empirically demonstrates that Amazon forest frontier systems have a limited capacity to endure extreme perturbations in the social and ecological interconnected domains. We argue that when a threshold is reached in systems featuring heavily institutionalized social asymmetries that constrain the action of vulnerable resource users, few conditions remain to reorganize the constituent setup through adaptive changes in the same regime or state. Reaching this stage will likely result in drastic changes that will lock the system into a pathway that compromises human wellbeing and the provision of ecosystem services. The fundamental nature of a tenurial scheme that combines social justice and environmental conservation tends thus to be lost for good, to enter a new regime with fewer options and novelties in social-ecological advances, reflecting the overall setbacks currently experienced in Brazilian policy. • Failed delivery and enforcement of land and forest policy in Amazon forest frontier. • Land tenure modality in a liminal status between environmental and agrarian reform regulations. • Social support for conservation affected by political and economic factors mediated by governmental agencies. • A new regime takes place with lower complexity in both social and ecological terms. • Outcomes reflect overall setback in Brazil's current social and environmental policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
33. The dynamics of land-use in Brazilian Amazon
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Mendonça, Mário Jorge, Loureiro, Paulo R.A., and Sachsida, Adolfo
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- *
LAND use , *SOIL management , *DEFORESTATION , *CROPPING systems - Abstract
This paper studies the dynamics of land-use in the Brazilian Amazon using a structural vector autoregressive (SVAR) model. A fixed effect panel data specification is used to control for the heterogeneity in the data. Meanwhile, spatial autocorrelation is also diagnosed by a statistical methodology that allows us to split the model in subsamples (clusters) of more homogenous municipalities. The clustering analysis shows that there are three clusters whose land-use patterns are strongly different in an economical point of view. The first cluster identifies municipalities dedicated to logging, natural resources exploitation and slash-and-burn cultures; the second cluster shows a more diversified agriculture; while the third cluster presents very developed intensive agriculture municipalities. Another contribution of this article relies on the assessment of contemporaneous causal relation among distinct land-uses areas. This new approach allows us to evaluate the dynamics relations arisen from unexpected innovations in the process of soil occupation. The impulse response functions (IRF) and the forecast error variance decompositions (FEVD) generate the following results: (1) in the opposition direction of previous studies, we find that the demand for cropping does not require to clear new areas of forest.; (2) contrary to previous studies we do not find indication that cattle ranching is the primary driver of deforestation; (3) the impact of a shock of pasture land on itself is virtually null at the initial stages, but increases over time, not requiring to clear extra areas of forest land but rather competing with crop land; (4) it seems that if not for all the Amazon Basin, at least in one cluster, cattle ranching and cropping could be competitive activities; and (5) we find out that in the long run pasture innovation is responsible for the major percent of the forecast error concern all land uses. It probably means that the destiny of distinct categories of land, in cluster one, is endogenously determine by activities connected to cattle. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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34. Social–ecological factors influencing tourist satisfaction in three ecotourism lodges in the southeastern Peruvian Amazon.
- Author
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Torres-Sovero, Claudia, González, José A., Martín-López, Berta, and Kirkby, Christopher A.
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ECOTOURISM ,TOURISTS ,CUSTOMER satisfaction ,TOURISM management ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
Abstract: Analysing the factors that influence visitor satisfaction is critical for the appropriate management of tourism, particularly in nature tourism enterprises, which are expected to contribute to biodiversity conservation and the development of local people. In this paper, we investigate the effect of different socio-economic and ecological variables, as well as tourist-operation related factors, on the overall satisfaction of tourists visiting three Amazonian lodges in Peru. We found three typologies of tourists, differing by several socio-economic and cultural factors, and by their motivations. The quality of the lodge was the factor that had the largest influence on overall satisfaction. Only one type of tourists (“true ecotourists”) showed a positive relation between their overall satisfaction and ecological features such as the species observed or cultural features such as operation of the lodge by native communities using local guides. Implications for management are discussed in terms of the potential of nature tourism to contribute to sustainable development in the Peruvian Amazon. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
35. Delivering off-grid electricity systems in the Brazilian Amazon.
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Gómez, Maria F. and Silveira, Semida
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REMOTE area power supply systems ,RURAL electrification ,ELECTRIFICATION ,ELECTRIC power distribution - Abstract
Abstract: In Brazil, more than 14million people have benefited from the rural electrification program Luz Para Todos (LPT — Light for all), mainly through grid-extension. A new off-grid model is now required if remote areas in the Amazon region are to fully benefit from the program. In this paper, we explore the institutional and financial schemes that support LPT and their suitability for delivering off-grid solutions in the Amazon region. Our conclusions draw attention to the need for more local and site specific solutions, and new regulatory frameworks to allow the participation of new actors. We argue that the uniqueness of the Amazon region justifies renewable technologies focused on local needs and potential, adaptation of the LPT institutional framework and rethinking of funding channels. An off-grid approach will enhance the inclusion of remote areas in universal access goals while adjustments will help guarantee the sustainability of the electrification program. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The relationship between technical efficiency in agriculture and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon
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Marchand, Sébastien
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURAL technology , *FORESTS & forestry , *LAND use , *DEFORESTATION , *FOREST conversion - Abstract
Abstract: This paper analyzes the impact of agricultural technical efficiency on the propensity of farmers to convert natural land into agricultural plots, i.e., to deforest, in the Brazilian Legal Amazon (BLA). A two-step econometric approach is adopted. A bootstrapped translog stochastic frontier that is a posteriori checked for functional consistency is used to assess technical efficiency and these estimates are put into a land-use model to assess the impact of productivity on deforestation. Analysis of agricultural census tract data suggests that technical efficiency has a U-shaped effect: both less and more efficient farms use more land for their agricultural activities and so have a positive effect on deforestation. However, the majority of farms in the BLA are on the ascendant slope, so that efficiency implies more deforestation in the BLA. The poor environmental valuation of the Brazilian forest, the uneven land distribution, and the problem of the de facto openly accessed forested and “unproductive” lands in the BLA could explain the U-shaped effect of technical efficiency on the conversion of forested land into agricultural land. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Slash-burn-and-churn: Landscape history and crop cultivation in pre-Columbian Amazonia
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Arroyo-Kalin, Manuel
- Subjects
- *
FOREST fires , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *ANTHROPOGENIC soils , *SLASHBURNING , *PALEOECOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Palaeoecologists argue that the vegetation of Amazonia has changed markedly since the late Pleistocene and show that forest fires have been increasingly more common since the beginning of the Holocene. Because these occurrences coincide with the onset of human colonisation of the region, students of Amazonia discuss the extent to which it''s Holocene fire record reflects climatically-related and/or anthropogenic causes. One factor that complicates inferences is the overall heterogeneity of the basin’s vegetation: during drier moments of the Holocene and/or within less humid sub-regions of the basin, it is difficult to conclude whether fire signals reflect more frequent natural fires or more intense burning by human communities. Another factor is that pre-Columbian livelihoods were not homogenously distributed throughout the region and changed over the course of the Holocene. This paper seeks to help establish an ‘anthropogenic baseline’ against which Holocene evidence for burning can be assessed. To this end, it reviews the role that slash-and-burn cultivation has had in discussions about pre-Columbian Amazonia, discusses how this account has been modified by recent research on pre-Columbian anthropogenic soils, and queries the extent to which the regionally-heterogeneous timing of crop domestication and cultivation may have influenced the fire history of pre-Columbian Amazonia. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Assessment of radargrammetric DSMs from TerraSAR-X Stripmap images in a mountainous relief area of the Amazon region
- Author
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de Oliveira, Cleber Gonzales, Paradella, Waldir Renato, and da Silva, Arnaldo de Queiroz
- Subjects
- *
OPTICAL radar , *TOPOGRAPHIC maps , *GLOBAL Positioning System , *ALTIMETERS , *MOUNTAIN climate , *IMAGE analysis , *RENEWABLE natural resources , *CHI-square distribution - Abstract
Abstract: The Brazilian Amazon is a vast territory with an enormous need for mapping and monitoring of renewable and non-renewable resources. Due to the adverse environmental condition (rain, cloud, dense vegetation) and difficult access, topographic information is still poor, and when available needs to be updated or re-mapped. In this paper, the feasibility of using Digital Surface Models (DSMs) extracted from TerraSAR-X Stripmap stereo-pair images for detailed topographic mapping was investigated for a mountainous area in the Carajás Mineral Province, located on the easternmost border of the Brazilian Amazon. The quality of the radargrammetric DSMs was evaluated regarding field altimetric measurements. Precise topographic field information acquired from a Global Positioning System (GPS) was used as Ground Control Points (GCPs) for the modeling of the stereoscopic DSMs and as Independent Check Points (ICPs) for the calculation of elevation accuracies. The analysis was performed following two ways: (1) the use of Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) and (2) calculations of systematic error (bias) and precision. The test for significant systematic error was based on the Student’s-t distribution and the test of precision was based on the Chi-squared distribution. The investigation has shown that the accuracy of the TerraSAR-X Stripmap DSMs met the requirements for 1:50,000 map (Class A) as requested by the Brazilian Standard for Cartographic Accuracy. Thus, the use of TerraSAR-X Stripmap images can be considered a promising alternative for detailed topographic mapping in similar environments of the Amazon region, where available topographic information is rare or presents low quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A proposal of electrical power supply to Brazilian Amazon remote communities
- Author
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Duarte, Ana Rosa, Bezerra, Ubiratan Holanda, de Lima Tostes, Maria Emilia, Duarte, André Montenegro, and da Rocha Filho, Geraldo Narciso
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRIC power , *RURAL electrification , *BIOMASS energy , *PLANT biomass , *VEGETABLE oils , *PALM oil , *ELECTRIC power transmission - Abstract
Abstract: This paper focuses on supplying electrical power for remote communities of the Brazilian Amazon using regional biomass, specifically palm oil biomass, as a primary energy source. The use of Straight Vegetable Oil (SVO) as fuel, is indicated for isolated communities, where the hydro plants or the installation of transmissions line are impracticable. The use of vegetable oils produced in the communities, is a solution when an adequate infrastructure to extracting the oil is available. Brazil is able to use an enormous diversity of vegetable oils, due to a great variety of plants, and the favorable climatic conditions. Technical, economic, environmental and social aspects are analyzed in order to provide a basis for electrical power supply viability in these communities. A case study is presented focused on a typical Brazilian Amazon community located in the State of Pará in order to demonstrate the applicability of the proposed viability strategy. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Mineralogy and chemistry of a new bentonite occurrence in the eastern Amazon region, northern Brazil
- Author
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Moraes, D.S., Angélica, R.S., Costa, C.E.F., Rocha Filho, G.N., and Zamian, J.R.
- Subjects
- *
BENTONITE , *MINERALOGY , *MONTMORILLONITE , *KAOLINITE , *ADSORPTION (Chemistry) - Abstract
Abstract: The Brazilian production of bentonite is approximately 300,000t/year, with more than 88% of this production concentrated in small deposits located in the Paraíba state (northeast Brazil), which consequently are becoming exhausted. The objective of this paper is to present a new occurrence of bentonite from the eastern Amazon in northern Brazil, here referred to as Balsas bentonite. A selected sample of the material was characterized by XRD, TG/DTA, ICP-OES, FTIR, SEM-EDS, N2 adsorption/desorption at 77K and CEC. The main constituent of the bulk sample is montmorillonite. Kaolinite is completely absent, in contrast to some bentonites found in the famous Paraíba state. The results obtained from the mineralogical and chemical characterization confirm that this material, in comparison to some reference bentonites from the Clay Mineral Society Source Clays, has promise as an engineering material, indicating its possible use in various research and industrial applications. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Can we really manage tropical forests without knowing the species within? Getting back to the basics of forest management through taxonomy.
- Author
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Lacerda, André Eduardo Biscaia de and Nimmo, Evelyn Roberta
- Subjects
FOREST management ,TROPICAL plants ,PLANT classification ,LOGGING ,SUSTAINABILITY ,FOREST surveys - Abstract
Abstract: Considering the pressures on tropical forests from deforestation and the recent expansion of harvesting through forest concessions in the Brazilian Amazon, it is imperative that forest management systems are scrutinized to ensure sustainability. One of the basic problems in forest management is the correct identification of species within the forest stand. While this is a well known issue, little consideration is given to how to mitigate this problem or its affects on management practices and conservation. This paper examines the current practice of forest inventories in the Brazilian Amazon, as part of the mandatory system of reduced impact logging (RIL), using extensive forest inventory verification. The results show that the RIL management plan implemented in the project area was based on a highly inaccurate forest inventory. At least 132 species or 43.5% of all species identified after botanical checking did not appear in the forest inventory and the common practice of matching vernacular names to scientific ones proved to be severely deficient. In contrast, a high percentage of field identifications based on local people''s expertise were correct. We suggest changes to current practices, including the training and use of parataxonomists, the collection of samples for verification, and stricter government control over current practices, which will achieve greater accuracy in data collection and forest management planning. Ultimately, we argue that in the current climate of extensive deforestation and forest use, it is essential that all aspects of RIL systems are reevaluated in order to achieve economic and ecological sustainability. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Amazonian floodplains harbour minerotrophic and ombrotrophic peatlands
- Author
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Lähteenoja, Outi, Ruokolainen, Kalle, Schulman, Leif, and Alvarez, José
- Subjects
- *
FLOODPLAINS , *PEATLANDS , *VEGETATION & climate , *SOIL testing , *BIOTIC communities - Abstract
In tropical lowlands, ecosystems with peat strata are commonly reported from Southeast Asia, but hardly at all from Amazonia. In this paper, we quantify the horizontal distribution of four important plant nutrients (Ca, Mg, K and P) in five peatland sites located in Peruvian Amazonia and the vertical distribution of these nutrients in one of the sites. With this data as well as topography measurements of the peat deposit from one of the sites, we showed that minerotrophic and ombrotrophic peatlands can be detected in Amazonian floodplains. The nutrient-poor ombrotrophic bogs receive nutrients only from atmospheric deposition because of their thick peat layer and convex topography, while the minerotrophic swamps are periodically covered by nutrient-rich floodwater and/or receive nutrient input from surface waters or from groundwater with capillary rise. The existence of such peatlands in the Amazonian lowlands increases the regional habitat diversity and availability of palaeoecological information and probably has implications also for the hydrological dynamics, water quality, and carbon dynamics of the area. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Biomass burning in Brazil's Amazonian “arc of deforestation”: Burning efficiency and charcoal formation in a fire after mechanized clearing at Feliz Natal, Mato Grosso.
- Author
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Righi, Ciro Abbud, de Alencastro Graça, Paulo Maurício Lima, Cerri, Carlos Clemente, Feigl, Brigitte Josefine, and Fearnside, Philip Martin
- Subjects
BIOMASS burning ,DEFORESTATION ,GREENHOUSE gases ,EMISSIONS (Air pollution) ,CHARCOAL ,FOREST fires ,CARBON - Abstract
Abstract: Estimates of greenhouse-gas emissions from deforestation are highly uncertain because of high variability in key parameters and because of the limited number of studies providing field measurements of these parameters. One such parameter is burning efficiency, which determines how much of the original forest''s aboveground carbon stock will be released in the burn, as well as how much will later be released by decay and how much will remain as charcoal. In this paper we examined the fate of biomass from a semideciduous tropical forest in the “arc of deforestation,” where clearing activity is concentrated along the southern edge of the Amazon forest. We estimated carbon content, charcoal formation and burning efficiency by direct measurements (cutting and weighing) and by line-intersect sampling (LIS) done along the axis of each plot before and after burning of felled vegetation. The total aboveground dry biomass found here (219.3Mgha
−1 ) is lower than the values found in studies that have been done in other parts of the Amazon region. Values for burning efficiency (65%) and charcoal formation (6.0%, or 5.98MgCha−1 ) were much higher than those found in past studies in tropical areas. The percentage of trunk biomass lost in burning (49%) was substantially higher than has been found in previous studies. This difference may be explained by the concentration of more stems in the smaller diameter classes and the low humidity of the fuel (the dry season was unusually long in 2007, the year of the burn). This study provides the first measurements of forest burning parameters for a group of forest types that is now undergoing rapid deforestation. The burning parameters estimated here indicate substantially higher burning efficiency than has been found in other Amazonian forest types. Quantification of burning efficiency is critical to estimates of trace-gas emissions from deforestation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Seasonal leaf dynamics in an Amazonian tropical forest.
- Author
-
Malhado, Ana C.M., Costa, Marcos H., de Lima, Francisca Z., Portilho, Kleber C., and Figueiredo, Daniel N.
- Subjects
FOREST dynamics ,SEASONS ,TREES ,ECOLOGICAL disturbances ,CLIMATE change ,DEFORESTATION ,DIEBACK ,LEAF area index ,LEAF growth ,FOREST biomass ,FOREST monitoring ,ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature - Abstract
Abstract: The ecological consequences of climate change for large tropical forests such as the Amazon are likely to be profound. Amazonian forests strongly influence regional and global climates and therefore any changes in forest structure, such as deforestation or die-back, may create positive feedback on externally forced climate change. Monitoring, modelling and managing the impacts of anthropogenic climate change on forest dynamics is therefore an important objective of forest researchers, and one that requires long-term data on changes at the level of community, populations and phenotypes. In this paper we provide the most comprehensive study yet on the seasonal dynamics of various leaf traits: leaf area index (LAI), leaf mortality (LM), leaf biomass (LB), leaf growth rate (LG), and leaf residence time (TR) from 50 experimental plots in a forest site at Belterra, Pará State, Brazil. From this study we estimate annual mean leaf area index (LAI) to be 5.07m
2 m−2 and annual mean leaf dry biomass to be 0.621kgm−2 . The typical leaf grew at 0.049kgm−2 month−1 and remained on the tree for 12.7 months. We compare these results to other similar studies and critically discuss the factors driving leaf demographics in Amazonia. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Agrarian Reform in the Brazilian Amazon: Its Implications for Land Distribution and Deforestation
- Author
-
Pacheco, Pablo
- Subjects
- *
LAND reform , *LAND title registration & transfer , *DEFORESTATION , *AGRICULTURE , *LANDSCAPES , *LAND use , *CENSUS , *REMOTE sensing , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Summary: This paper examines the interactions between state-led land reform, agrarian structures, and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon. Land reform tends to promote land redistribution through regularization of smallholder land invasions of large-scale landholdings, and by redistribution of public lands to smallholders in existing colonization frontiers. The implications of state-led land reform on deforestation are heterogeneous. I argue that impacts of agrarian reform are strongly related to the pre-existing social and economic configuration of the frontiers where it takes place. While it leads to lower rates of deforestation in landscapes dominated by smallholders with diversified land use, its impact on forest conversion is higher in landscapes where extensive land use, mainly prompted by large-scale cattle ranching, tends to dominate. I provide an assessment for the whole Brazilian Amazon, and examine two research sites in the state of Pará, namely Uruará and Redenção. The study is based on informant interviews, secondary information, agricultural census data, and remote sensing data. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Trace element levels in whole blood of riparian villagers of the Brazilian Amazon
- Author
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Rodrigues, Jairo Lisboa, Batista, Bruno Lemos, Fillion, Myriam, Passos, Carlos J.S., Mergler, Donna, and Barbosa, Fernando
- Subjects
- *
BRAZILIANS , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of trace elements , *BLOOD testing , *TRACE elements in water , *NUTRITIONAL assessment , *RIPARIAN areas , *HEALTH - Abstract
Monitoring the nutritional status of essential elements is of critical importance in human health. However, trace element concentrations in biological fluids are affected by environmental and physiological parameters, and therefore considerable variations can occur between specific population subgroups. Brazil is a large country with much food diversity. Moreover, dietary habits differ from north to south. As an example, the traditional populations of the Brazilian Amazon basin are heavily dependent on fish, fruits, vegetables and manioc for their daily sustenance. However, very few studies have examined to what extent these diets reflect adequate nutritional status for essential elements. Then, in the present study we have evaluated the levels of some trace elements (Cu, Co, Zn Sr, and Rb) in the whole blood of a riparian Brazilian Amazonian population and estimated the influence of age and gender on levels and inter-element interactions in the same population. For this, 253 subjects, aged 15 to 87, from 13 communities situated on the banks of the Tapajós, one of the major tributaries of the Amazon, were randomly selected. The values found for cobalt, copper and strontium in whole blood are in the same range as in other populations. On the other hand, the levels of rubidium and zinc may be considered higher. Moreover, gender was shown to influence Zn and Cu levels while age influenced the concentrations of Sr and Rb in men and Cu in women. Given the scarcity of studies examining nutritional status in traditional communities of the Amazon, our study is the first to provide relevant insight into trace element values in this region and inter-element interactions. This paper is also of particular importance for future studies looking at the possible protective effects of traditional Amazon riparian diets against mercury intake from fish consumption. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The position of the Amazonian Craton in supercontinents.
- Author
-
Cordani, U.G., Teixeira, W., D'Agrella-Filho, M.S., and Trindade, R.I.
- Subjects
CRATONS ,GEODYNAMICS ,PALEOGEOGRAPHY ,PALEOMAGNETISM ,RODINIA (Supercontinent) ,GONDWANA (Continent) - Abstract
Abstract: This paper examines the extensive regions of Proterozoic accretionary belts that either formed most of the Amazonian Craton, or are marginal to its southeastern border. Their overall geodynamic significance is considered taking into account the paleogeographic reconstruction of Columbia, Rodinia and Gondwana. Amazonia would be part of Columbia together with Laurentia, North China and Baltica, forming a continuous, continental landmass linked by the Paleo- to Mesoproterozoic mobile belts that constitute large portions of it. The Rodinia supercontinent was formed in the Mesoproterozoic by the agglutination of the existing cratonic fragments, such as Laurentia and Amazonia, during contemporary continental collisions worldwide. The available paleomagnetic data suggest that Laurentia and Amazonia remained attached until at least 600 Ma. Since all other cratonic units surrounding Laurentia have already rifted away by that time, the separation between Amazonia and Laurentia marks the final break-up of Rodinia with the opening of the lapetus ocean. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Detecting subtle land use change in tropical forests
- Author
-
Sirén, Anders H. and Brondizio, Eduardo S.
- Subjects
- *
LAND use , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *REMOTE sensing - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents a study of land use and land cover dynamics in an indigenous community in the Amazon, in particular the methods used to deal with problems related to small size of cultivated plots, spectral similarity between land use classes, atmospheric haze and topographic shade. The main focus was on identifying and quantifying cultivated and fallow areas. Based on remote sensing alone, it was possible to identify about half of the fallows younger than 20 years of age. Combining remote sensing with field-based methods, however, it was possible to estimate the number and size of cultivated areas, the extent of fallows up to 65 years of age, as well as the rate of old-growth forest loss. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. How rare is too rare to harvest?: Management challenges posed by timber species occurring at low densities in the Brazilian Amazon.
- Author
-
Schulze, Mark, Grogan, James, Landis, R. Matthew, and Vidal, Edson
- Subjects
FOREST conservation ,PLANT populations ,LOGGING ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,SUSTAINABLE development ,TREES ,FORESTRY laws - Abstract
Abstract: Tropical forests are characterized by diverse assemblages of plant and animal species compared to temperate forests. Corollary to this general rule is that most tree species, whether valued for timber or not, occur at low densities (<1adulttreeha
−1 ) or may be locally rare. In the Brazilian Amazon, many of the most highly valued timber species occur at extremely low densities yet are intensively harvested with little regard for impacts on population structures and dynamics. These include big-leaf mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla), ipê (Tabebuia serratifolia and Tabebuia impetiginosa), jatobá (Hymenaea courbaril), and freijó cinza (Cordia goeldiana). Brazilian forest regulations prohibit harvests of species that meet the legal definition of rare – fewer than three trees per 100ha – but treat all species populations exceeding this density threshold equally. In this paper we simulate logging impacts on a group of timber species occurring at low densities that are widely distributed across eastern and southern Amazonia, based on field data collected at four research sites since 1997, asking: under current Brazilian forest legislation, what are the prospects for second harvests on 30-year cutting cycles given observed population structures, growth, and mortality rates? Ecologically ‘rare’ species constitute majorities in commercial species assemblages in all but one of the seven large-scale inventories we analyzed from sites spanning the Amazon (range 49–100% of total commercial species). Although densities of only six of 37 study species populations met the Brazilian legal definition of a rare species, timber stocks of five of the six timber species declined substantially at all sites between first and second harvests in simulations based on legally allowable harvest intensities. Reducing species-level harvest intensity by increasing minimum felling diameters or increasing seed tree retention levels improved prospects for second harvests of those populations with a relatively high proportion of submerchantable stems, but did not dramatically improve projections for populations with relatively flat diameter distributions. We argue that restrictions on logging very low-density timber tree populations, such as the current Brazilian standard, provide inadequate minimum protection for vulnerable species. Population declines, even if reduced-impact logging (RIL) is eventually adopted uniformly, can be anticipated for a large pool of high-value timber species unless harvest intensities are adapted to timber species population ecology, and silvicultural treatments are adopted to remedy poor natural stocking in logged stands. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. HAND, a new terrain descriptor using SRTM-DEM: Mapping terra-firme rainforest environments in Amazonia
- Author
-
Rennó, Camilo Daleles, Nobre, Antonio Donato, Cuartas, Luz Adriana, Soares, João Vianei, Hodnett, Martin G., Tomasella, Javier, and Waterloo, Maarten J.
- Subjects
- *
RAIN forests , *FOREST hydrology , *FOREST canopies , *SOIL moisture , *TOPOGRAPHICAL surveying , *VEGETATION monitoring - Abstract
Abstract: Optical imagery can reveal spectral properties of forest canopy, which rarely allows for finding accurate correspondence of canopy features with soils and hydrology. In Amazonia non-floodable swampy forests can not be easily distinguished from non-floodable terra-firme forests using just bidimensional spectral data. Accurate topographic data are required for the understanding of land surface processes at finer scales. Topographic detail has now become available with the Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission (SRTM) data. This new digital elevation model (DEM) shows the feature-rich relief of lowland rain forests, adding to the ability to map rain forest environments through many quantitative terrain descriptors. In this paper we report on the development of a new quantitative topographic algorithm, called HAND (Height Above the Nearest Drainage), based on SRTM-DEM data. We tested the HAND descriptor for a groundwater, topographic and vegetation dataset from central Amazonia. The application of the HAND descriptor in terrain classification revealed strong correlation between soil water conditions, like classes of water table depth, and topography. This correlation obeys the physical principle of soil draining potential, or relative vertical distance to drainage, which can be detected remotely through the topography of the vegetation canopy found in the SRTM-DEM data. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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