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Int. J. Remote Sens., Vol. 29, No. 24. (2008), pp. 7285-7291.
Abstract
Sustainable management of tropical forests has been identified as one of the main objectives for conservation and management of carbon stocks. Thus, managers need tools to assess whether current management practices are sustainable. Although sets of criteria and indicators have been developed to help managers, there is a need to assess these indicators from an operational perspective. We present an approach using geospatial analysis to assess a key ecoindicator: 'The change in diversity of habitats as a result of human interventions ...
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Landscape Ecology, Vol. 5, No. 4. (1 July 1991), pp. 191-201.
Abstract
Conservation of representative biotopes, single species populations or biodiversity usually embraces two or more biotopes, and is often affected by surrounding croplands. The conclusions from landscape ecological studies can, therefore, offer important contributions to conservation, especially at early levels of landscape change or habitat fragmentation. Indicator and keystone species are useful for monitoring and managing fragmented biotopes, respectively. Communities as well as single species are affected by the juxtaposition of successional and climax biotopes, which influence climatic equability, seasonality, productivity and ...
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Vegetatio, Vol. 121, No. 1/2. (1995), pp. 31-40.
Abstract
This paper is intended to provide a brief review of the tropical seasonal forest, one type of the tropical moist forests in monsoon Asia. It will also focus on and summarise issues of current concern in relation to their depletion and global environmental issues. Tropical moist forests occur in the rainy tropical and monsoon tropical climate types. The tropical moist evergreen forest or the tropical rain forest, which account for two-thirds of the tropical moist forests are rich in biodiversity and ...
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Journal of Tropical Forest Science, Vol. 13, No. 4. (October 2001), pp. 671-690.
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Environmental Management, Vol. 36, No. 3. (29 September 2005), pp. 394-403.
Abstract
This paper summarizes land-cover and land-use change at eight sites in Thailand, Yunnan (China), Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos over the last 50 years. Project methodology included incorporating information collected from a combination of semiformal, key informant, and formal household interviews with the development of spatial databases based on aerial photographs, satellite images, topographic maps, and GPS data. Results suggest that land use (e.g. swidden cultivation) and land cover (e.g. secondary vegetation) have remained stable and the minor amount of land-use change ...
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Biodiversity and Conservation, Vol. 16, No. 13. (1 December 2007), pp. 3935-3938.
Abstract
Abstract Here, I report on how forest area in Southeast Asia has changed for different types of forest and across different countries between the periods of 1990–2000 and 2000–2005. The loss of old growth forests has accelerated in Indonesia, Cambodia and Vietnam but have ceased in Thailand, Malaysia, Laos and the Philippines. Secondary forests continue to be lost in Malaysia, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines. Plantation forests have increased in area by 25.0% from 1990 to 2005 but still ...
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Mountain Research and Development, Vol. 27, No. 3. (August 2007), pp. 232-241.
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In United Nations Climate Change Conference (2007), pp. 8-11.
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Remote Sensing of Environment, Vol. 98, No. 2-3. (15 October 2005), pp. 329-343.
Abstract
We propose a new spectral index, the Normalized Difference Fraction Index (NDFI), for enhanced detection of forest canopy damage caused by selective logging activities and associated forest fires. The NDFI synthesizes information from several component fraction images derived from spectral mixture models. Interpretation of the NDFI data is facilitated by a contextual classification algorithm (CCA) that enables accurate mapping of logging and fire-derived canopy damages. The CCA utilizes detected log landings, which are the spatial signature of selective logging, as starting ...
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Remote Sensing of Environment, Vol. 113, No. 8. (19 August 2009), pp. 1739-1748.
Abstract
Landsat time series data sets were acquired for the Santa Fe National Forest in New Mexico. This area includes the San Pedro Parks Wilderness area, which was designated as an official wilderness in 1964. Eight autumnal Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) scenes acquired from 1988 to 2006 were analyzed to determine whether significant changes have occurred throughout the region during the past 18 years and, if so, to assess whether the changes are long-term and gradual or short-term and abrupt. It was found ...
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Remote Sensing of Environment, Vol. 113, No. 8. (14 August 2009), pp. 1613-1627.
Abstract
Investigating the temporal and spatial pattern of landscape disturbances is an important requirement for modeling ecosystem characteristics, including understanding changes in the terrestrial carbon cycle or mapping the quality and abundance of wildlife habitats. Data from the Landsat series of satellites have been successfully applied to map a range of biophysical vegetation parameters at a 30 m spatial resolution; the Landsat 16 day revisit cycle, however, which is often extended due to cloud cover, can be a major obstacle for monitoring short term ...
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CIFOR Occasional Paper, Vol. 30 (June 2000)
Abstract
association of 41 public and private sector donors that supports a network of sixteen international agricultural research institutes, CIFOR being the newest of these. The Group was established in 1971. The CGIAR Centers are part of a global agricultural research system which endeavours to apply international scientific capacity to solving of the problems of the world’s disadvantaged people. CIFOR CIFOR was established under the CGIAR system in response to global concerns about the social, environmental and economic consequences of loss and ...
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Forest Ecology and Management, Vol. 256, No. 9. (15 October 2008), pp. 1587-1595.
Abstract
Deforestation and forest degradation are associated and progressive processes resulting in the conversion of forest area into a mosaic of mature forest fragments, pasture, and degraded habitat. Monitoring of forest landscape spatial structures has been recommended to detect degenerative trends in forest conditions. GIS and remote sensing play an important role in the generation of such data to identify degraded and deforested areas as well as potential areas for conservation. In this study we analyzed forest degradation and deforestation trends in ...
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