| Literature DB >> 29785463 |
W Brad Smith1, Rubí Angélica Cuenca Lara2, Carina Edith Delgado Caballero2, Carlos Isaías Godínez Valdivia2, Joseph S Kapron3, Juan Carlos Leyva Reyes2, Carmen Lourdes Meneses Tovar2, Patrick D Miles4, Sonja N Oswalt5, Mayra Ramírez Salgado2, Xilong Alex Song6, Graham Stinson6, Sergio Armando Villela Gaytán2.
Abstract
Forests cannot be managed sustainably without reliable data to inform decisions. National Forest Inventories (NFI) tend to report national statistics, with sub-national stratification based on domestic ecological classification systems. It is becoming increasingly important to be able to report statistics on ecosystems that span international borders, as global change and globalization expand stakeholders' spheres of concern. The state of a transnational ecosystem can only be properly assessed by examining the entire ecosystem. In global forest resource assessments, it may be useful to break national statistics down by ecosystem, especially for large countries. The Inventory and Monitoring Working Group (IMWG) of the North American Forest Commission (NAFC) has begun developing a harmonized North American Forest Database (NAFD) for managing forest inventory data, enabling consistent, continental-scale forest assessment supporting ecosystem-level reporting and relational queries. The first iteration of the database contains data describing 1.9 billion ha, including 677.5 million ha of forest. Data harmonization is made challenging by the existence of definitions and methodologies tailored to suit national circumstances, emerging from each country's professional forestry development. This paper reports the methods used to synchronize three national forest inventories, starting with a small suite of variables and attributes.Keywords: Biometrics; Forest assessment; Forest inventory; Global forestry; North America
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29785463 DOI: 10.1007/s10661-018-6649-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Monit Assess ISSN: 0167-6369 Impact factor: 2.513