Literature DB >> 17708206

Poverty and corruption compromise tropical forest reserves.

S Joseph Wright1, G Arturo Sanchez-Azofeifa, Carlos Portillo-Quintero, Diane Davies.   

Abstract

We used the global fire detection record provided by the satellite-based Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) to determine the number of fires detected inside 823 tropical and subtropical moist forest reserves and for contiguous buffer areas 5, 10, and 15 km wide. The ratio of fire detection densities (detections per square kilometer) inside reserves to their contiguous buffer areas provided an index of reserve effectiveness. Fire detection density was significantly lower inside reserves than in paired, contiguous buffer areas but varied by five orders of magnitude among reserves. The buffer: reserve detection ratio varied by up to four orders of magnitude among reserves within a single country, and median values varied by three orders of magnitude among countries. Reserves tended to be least effective at reducing fire frequency in many poorer countries and in countries beset by corruption. Countries with the most successful reserves include Costa Rica, Jamaica, Malaysia, and Taiwan and the Indonesian island of Java. Countries with the most problematic reserves include Cambodia, Guatemala, Paraguay, and Sierra Leone and the Indonesian portion of Borneo. We provide fire detection density for 3964 tropical and subtropical reserves and their buffer areas in the hope that these data will expedite further analyses that might lead to improved management of tropical reserves.

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17708206     DOI: 10.1890/06-1330.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecol Appl        ISSN: 1051-0761            Impact factor:   4.657


  9 in total

1.  Averting biodiversity collapse in tropical forest protected areas.

Authors:  William F Laurance; D Carolina Useche; Julio Rendeiro; Margareta Kalka; Corey J A Bradshaw; Sean P Sloan; Susan G Laurance; Mason Campbell; Kate Abernethy; Patricia Alvarez; Victor Arroyo-Rodriguez; Peter Ashton; Julieta Benítez-Malvido; Allard Blom; Kadiri S Bobo; Charles H Cannon; Min Cao; Richard Carroll; Colin Chapman; Rosamond Coates; Marina Cords; Finn Danielsen; Bart De Dijn; Eric Dinerstein; Maureen A Donnelly; David Edwards; Felicity Edwards; Nina Farwig; Peter Fashing; Pierre-Michel Forget; Mercedes Foster; George Gale; David Harris; Rhett Harrison; John Hart; Sarah Karpanty; W John Kress; Jagdish Krishnaswamy; Willis Logsdon; Jon Lovett; William Magnusson; Fiona Maisels; Andrew R Marshall; Deedra McClearn; Divya Mudappa; Martin R Nielsen; Richard Pearson; Nigel Pitman; Jan van der Ploeg; Andrew Plumptre; John Poulsen; Mauricio Quesada; Hugo Rainey; Douglas Robinson; Christiane Roetgers; Francesco Rovero; Frederick Scatena; Christian Schulze; Douglas Sheil; Thomas Struhsaker; John Terborgh; Duncan Thomas; Robert Timm; J Nicolas Urbina-Cardona; Karthikeyan Vasudevan; S Joseph Wright; Juan Carlos Arias-G; Luzmila Arroyo; Mark Ashton; Philippe Auzel; Dennis Babaasa; Fred Babweteera; Patrick Baker; Olaf Banki; Margot Bass; Inogwabini Bila-Isia; Stephen Blake; Warren Brockelman; Nicholas Brokaw; Carsten A Brühl; Sarayudh Bunyavejchewin; Jung-Tai Chao; Jerome Chave; Ravi Chellam; Connie J Clark; José Clavijo; Robert Congdon; Richard Corlett; H S Dattaraja; Chittaranjan Dave; Glyn Davies; Beatriz de Mello Beisiegel; Rosa de Nazaré Paes da Silva; Anthony Di Fiore; Arvin Diesmos; Rodolfo Dirzo; Diane Doran-Sheehy; Mitchell Eaton; Louise Emmons; Alejandro Estrada; Corneille Ewango; Linda Fedigan; François Feer; Barbara Fruth; Jacalyn Giacalone Willis; Uromi Goodale; Steven Goodman; Juan C Guix; Paul Guthiga; William Haber; Keith Hamer; Ilka Herbinger; Jane Hill; Zhongliang Huang; I Fang Sun; Kalan Ickes; Akira Itoh; Natália Ivanauskas; Betsy Jackes; John Janovec; Daniel Janzen; Mo Jiangming; Chen Jin; Trevor Jones; Hermes Justiniano; Elisabeth Kalko; Aventino Kasangaki; Timothy Killeen; Hen-biau King; Erik Klop; Cheryl Knott; Inza Koné; Enoka Kudavidanage; José Lahoz da Silva Ribeiro; John Lattke; Richard Laval; Robert Lawton; Miguel Leal; Mark Leighton; Miguel Lentino; Cristiane Leonel; Jeremy Lindsell; Lee Ling-Ling; K Eduard Linsenmair; Elizabeth Losos; Ariel Lugo; Jeremiah Lwanga; Andrew L Mack; Marlucia Martins; W Scott McGraw; Roan McNab; Luciano Montag; Jo Myers Thompson; Jacob Nabe-Nielsen; Michiko Nakagawa; Sanjay Nepal; Marilyn Norconk; Vojtech Novotny; Sean O'Donnell; Muse Opiang; Paul Ouboter; Kenneth Parker; N Parthasarathy; Kátia Pisciotta; Dewi Prawiradilaga; Catherine Pringle; Subaraj Rajathurai; Ulrich Reichard; Gay Reinartz; Katherine Renton; Glen Reynolds; Vernon Reynolds; Erin Riley; Mark-Oliver Rödel; Jessica Rothman; Philip Round; Shoko Sakai; Tania Sanaiotti; Tommaso Savini; Gertrud Schaab; John Seidensticker; Alhaji Siaka; Miles R Silman; Thomas B Smith; Samuel Soares de Almeida; Navjot Sodhi; Craig Stanford; Kristine Stewart; Emma Stokes; Kathryn E Stoner; Raman Sukumar; Martin Surbeck; Mathias Tobler; Teja Tscharntke; Andrea Turkalo; Govindaswamy Umapathy; Merlijn van Weerd; Jorge Vega Rivera; Meena Venkataraman; Linda Venn; Carlos Verea; Carolina Volkmer de Castilho; Matthias Waltert; Benjamin Wang; David Watts; William Weber; Paige West; David Whitacre; Ken Whitney; David Wilkie; Stephen Williams; Debra D Wright; Patricia Wright; Lu Xiankai; Pralad Yonzon; Franky Zamzani
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2.  Governance, agricultural intensification, and land sparing in tropical South America.

Authors:  Michele Graziano Ceddia; Nicholas Oliver Bardsley; Sergio Gomez-y-Paloma; Sabine Sedlacek
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3.  Asymmetric forest transition driven by the interaction of socioeconomic development and environmental heterogeneity in Central America.

Authors:  Daniel J Redo; H Ricardo Grau; T Mitchell Aide; Matthew L Clark
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2012-05-21       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 4.  Core concepts of spatial prioritisation in systematic conservation planning.

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Journal:  Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc       Date:  2012-12-22

5.  Governance factors in the identification of global conservation priorities for mammals.

Authors:  Johanna Eklund; Anni Arponen; Piero Visconti; Mar Cabeza
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2011-09-27       Impact factor: 6.237

6.  Estimation of the distribution of Tabebuia guayacan (Bignoniaceae) using high-resolution remote sensing imagery.

Authors:  Arturo Sánchez-Azofeifa; Benoit Rivard; Joseph Wright; Ji-Lu Feng; Peijun Li; Mei Mei Chong; Stephanie A Bohlman
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2011-03-30       Impact factor: 3.576

7.  Critical Uncertainties and Gaps in the Environmental- and Social-Impact Assessment of the Proposed Interoceanic Canal through Nicaragua.

Authors:  Jorge A Huete-Pérez; Manuel Ortega-Hegg; Gerald R Urquhart; Alan P Covich; Katherine Vammen; Bruce E Rittmann; Julio C Miranda; Sergio Espinoza-Corriols; Adolfo Acevedo; María L Acosta; Juan P Gómez; Michael T Brett; Michael Hanemann; Andreas Härer; Jaime Incer-Barquero; Frank J Joyce; J Wesley Lauer; Jean Michel Maes; Mason B Tomson; Axel Meyer; Salvador Montenegro-Guillén; W Lindsay Whitlow; Jerald L Schnoor; Pedro J J Alvarez
Journal:  Bioscience       Date:  2016-06-02       Impact factor: 8.589

8.  A Global Analysis of Deforestation in Moist Tropical Forest Protected Areas.

Authors:  B D Spracklen; M Kalamandeen; D Galbraith; E Gloor; D V Spracklen
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-12-03       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Cheap and nasty? The potential perils of using management costs to identify global conservation priorities.

Authors:  Erin McCreless; Piero Visconti; Josie Carwardine; Chris Wilcox; Robert J Smith
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-11-15       Impact factor: 3.240

  9 in total

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