| Literature DB >> 26064561 |
Robert S Walker1, Marcus J Hamilton2, Aaron A Groth3.
Abstract
The vast forests on the border between Brazil and Peru harbour a number of indigenous groups that have limited contact with the outside world. Accurate estimates of population sizes and village areas are essential to begin assessing the immediate conservation needs of such isolated groups. In contrast to overflights and encounters on the ground, remote sensing with satellite imagery offers a safe, inexpensive, non-invasive and systematic approach to provide demographic and land-use information for isolated peoples. Satellite imagery can also be used to understand the growth of isolated villages over time. There are five isolated villages in the headwaters of the Envira River confirmed by overflights that are visible with recent satellite imagery further confirming their locations and allowing measurement of their cleared gardens, village areas and thatch roofed houses. These isolated villages appear to have population densities that are an order of magnitude higher than averages for other Brazilian indigenous villages. Here, we report on initial results of a remote surveillance programme designed to monitor movements and assess the demographic health of isolated peoples as a means to better mitigate against external threats to their long-term survival.Entities:
Keywords: Amazonia; land use; satellite imagery; uncontacted indigenous societies
Year: 2014 PMID: 26064561 PMCID: PMC4448834 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.140246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Information for five different locations of isolated indigenous villages. Population estimates are based on FUNAI accounts.
| site | language/dialect | confirmed in overflight | satellite image date | cleared area (ha) | population estimate | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X | Xatanawa | 2008, 3/2014 | 5/2006 | 3 | 4+ | 3.8 | ∼60 |
| H | Yaminawa? | 2008, 7/2009 | 7/2013 | 11 | 10+ | 30.9 | ∼300 |
| M | Yaminawa? | 2008 | 7/2013 | 20 | ? | 17.7 | ∼100 |
| F1 | Mastanahua? | 8/2014 | 8/2012 | 3 | 9? | 1.8 | ? |
| F2 | Mastanahua? | 2008, 7/2009 | 7/2013 | 4 | 5 | 3.3 | ∼50 |
| total | 41 | 28+ | 57.7 | 510 |
Figure 1.Satellite images of clearings and houses for sections of the five sites. From top to bottom are sites X, H, M, F1 and F2. © 2014 DigitalGlobe, Inc.
Figure 2.Top image is the western portion of site H in May 2012 and the bottom image is the same area in July 2013. Note the addition of more slash-and-burn fields (designated by arrows) and the expansion of the two large cleared areas in the centre of the image. These additions total 16 ha cleared in 14 months. Areas that were cleared in 2012 are filled with planted crops in 2013. © 2014 DigitalGlobe, Inc.
Figure 3.Population-by-area graph for 71 (contacted) indigenous villages in Brazil with known populations and areas measured using high-resolution images in Google Earth. Best-fitted regression line (y=3.04 x0.694, R2=0.55) and 95% prediction interval are shown. Isolated villages are marked separately with site letters using areas and population estimates from table 1. Note the log–log scale and that isolated villagers live at a high density, all appearing above the upper 95% prediction interval.