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Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of Amazon deforestation and fire by parks and indigenous lands.

TLDR
Satellite-based maps of land cover and fire occurrence in the Brazilian Amazon were used to compare the performance of large uninhabited and inhabited reserves and found the inhibitory effect of indigenous lands on deforestation was strong after centuries of contact with the national society and was not correlated with indigenous population density.
Abstract
Conservation scientists generally agree that many types of protected areas will be needed to protect tropical forests. But little is known of the comparative performance of inhabited and uninhabited reserves in slowing the most extreme form of forest disturbance: conversion to agriculture. We used satellite-based maps of land cover and fire occurrence in the Brazilian Amazon to compare the performance of large (>10,000 ha) un- inhabited (parks) and inhabited (indigenous lands, extractive reserves, and national forests) reserves. Reserves significantly reduced both deforestation and fire. Deforestation was 1.7 (extractive reserves) to 20 (parks) times higher along the outside versus the inside of the reserve perimeters and fire occurrence was 4 (indigenous lands) to 9 (national forests) times higher. No strong difference in the inhibition of deforestation (p = 0.11) or fire (p = 0.34) was found between parks and indigenous lands. However, uninhabited reserves tended to be located away from areas of high deforestation and burning rates. In contrast, indigenous lands were often created in re- sponse to frontier expansion, and many prevented deforestation completely despite high rates of deforestation along their boundaries. The inhibitory effect of indigenous lands on deforestation was strong after centuries of contact with the national society and was not correlated with indigenous population density. Indigenous lands occupy one-fifth of the Brazilian Amazon—five times the area under protection in parks—and are currently the most important barrier to Amazon deforestation. As the protected-area network expands from 36% to 41% of the Brazilian Amazon over the coming years, the greatest challenge will be successful reserve implementation in high-risk areas of frontier expansion as indigenous lands are strengthened. This success will depend on a broad base of political support.

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Climate Change, Deforestation, and the Fate of the Amazon

TL;DR: The forest biome of Amazonia is one of Earth's greatest biological treasures and a major component of the Earth system, and this century, it faces the dual threats of deforestation and stress from climate change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling conservation in the Amazon basin

TL;DR: It is reported that protected areas in the Amazon basin—the central feature of prevailing conservation approaches—are an important but insufficient component of this strategy, based on policy-sensitive simulations of future deforestation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agricultural expansion and its impacts on tropical nature

TL;DR: Key priorities are to improve technologies and policies that promote more ecologically efficient food production while optimizing the allocation of lands to conservation and agriculture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cropland expansion changes deforestation dynamics in the southern Brazilian Amazon

TL;DR: Pasture remains the dominant land use after forest clearing in Mato Grosso, but the growing importance of larger and faster conversion of forest to cropland defines a new paradigm of forest loss in Amazonia and refutes the claim that agricultural intensification does not lead to new deforestation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of roads and linear clearings on tropical forests.

TL;DR: It is asserted that such impacts are often qualitatively and quantitatively different in tropical forests than in other ecosystems, and practical measures to reduce the negative impacts of roads and other linear infrastructure on tropical species are highlighted.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness of Parks in Protecting Tropical Biodiversity

TL;DR: The majority of parks are successful at stopping land clearing, and to a lesser degree effective at mitigating logging, hunting, fire, and grazing, suggesting that even modest increases in funding would directly increase the ability of parks to protect tropical biodiversity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Large-scale impoverishment of Amazonian forests by logging and fire

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present field surveys of wood mills and forest burning across Brazilian Amazonia which show that logging crews severely damage 10,000 to 15,000 km2 of forest that are not included in deforestation mapping programmes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling conservation in the Amazon basin

TL;DR: It is reported that protected areas in the Amazon basin—the central feature of prevailing conservation approaches—are an important but insufficient component of this strategy, based on policy-sensitive simulations of future deforestation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Empty Forest Many large animals are already ecologically extinct in vast areas of neotropical forest where the vegetation still appears intact

Kent H. Redford
- 01 Jun 1992 - 
TL;DR: Until recently, human influence on tropical forests through such activities as burning, swidden agriculture, and hunting was regarded by ecologists as of such low impact that it was negligible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Amazonian Deforestation and Regional Climate Change

TL;DR: The authors used a coupled numerical model of the global atmosphere and biosphere (Center for Ocean-Land- Atmosphere GCM) to assess the effects of Amazonian deforestation on the regional and global climate, and found that when the Amazonian tropical forests were replaced by degraded grass (pasture) in the model, there was a significant increase in the mean surface temperature (about 2.5°C) and a decrease in the annual evapo-transpiration (30% reduction), precipitation (25% reduction) and runoff (20% reduction).
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