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Get Free AccessThe distributions of forest and deforestation throughout the tropics are poorly known despite their importance to regional biodiversity and global climate and biodiversity. Deforestation estimates based on surveys or sampling have large errors, and high-resolution, wall-to-wall mapping of tropical forests is necessary to assess the impacts of fragmentation. Landsat satellite images from the mid-1980s and early 1990s were thus used to map closed-canopy tropical forest extent and anthropogenic deforestation in an approximately 700 000 km 2 area of Amazonian Bolivia with precipitation >1000 mm yr −1 . Total potential forest cover extent, including tropical deciduous forest, was 448 700 km 2 , while the area of natural non-forest formations was 245 100 km 2 . The area deforested was 15 500 km 2 in the mid-1980s and 24 700 km 2 by the early 1990s. The rate of tropical deforestation in the forest zone of Bolivia with >1000 mm yr −1 precipitation below 1500 m elevation and north of 19° S, was 1529 km 2 yr −1 from 1985–1986 to 1992–1994. Our estimates of deforestation are significantly lower than those reported by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). We document a spatially-concentrated ‘deforestation zone’ in Santa Cruz where >60% of the Bolivian deforestation has occurred. These results indicate that the rate of deforestation in Bolivia has been rapid despite a relatively small human population, and, as in Brazil, clearance has concentrated in the more deciduous forests.
Marc K. Steininger, Compton Tucker, John Townshend, Timothy J. Killeen, Arthur Desch, Vivre Bell, Peter J. Ersts (2001). Tropical deforestation in the Bolivian Amazon. Environmental Conservation, 28(2), pp. 127-134, DOI: 10.1017/s0376892901000133.
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Type
Article
Year
2001
Authors
7
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Environmental Conservation
DOI
10.1017/s0376892901000133
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