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Satellites
show Amazon parks, indigenous reserves stop forest clearing
Woods Hole Research Center
Conservation scientists generally agree that many types of
protected areas will be needed to protect tropical forests.
However, little is known about the comparative performance
of inhabited and uninhabited reserves in slowing the most
extreme form of forest disturbance: conversion to agriculture.
In a paper recently published in Conservation Biology (2006,
Vol 20, pages 65-73), an international team of scientists,
led by Daniel Nepstad of the Woods Hole Research Center and
the Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazonia, use satellite
data to demonstrate, for the first time, that rainforest parks
and indigenous territories halt deforestation and forest fires.
According to Nepstad, "Protecting indigenous and
traditional peoples' lands and natural areas in the Amazon
works to stop deforestation. The idea that many parks in the
tropics only exist 'on paper' must be re-examined as must
the notion that indigenous reserves are less effective than
parks in protecting nature."
While previous studies had queried park managers about reserve
performance, this study is the first to evaluate the effectiveness
of tropical protected areas against forest clearing using
quantitative analysis of satellite data. The group used satellite-based
maps of land cover and fire occurrence between 1997 and 2000
to compare parks and indigenous lands. Deforestation was 1.7
to 20 times higher along the outside versus the inside perimeter
of reserves, while fires were 4 to 9 times higher. Indigenous
lands clearly stopped clearing in high-deforestation frontier
regions: 33 of 38 indigenous territories with annual deforestation
greater than 1.5 percent outside their borders had inner deforestation
rates of 0.75 percent or less. Few parks are located in active
frontier areas (4 of 15 in the sample) than indigenous lands
(33 of 38). But parks' and indigenous lands' ability to inhibit
deforestation appear similar.
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.
Some conservationists argue that with acculturation to market
society, indigenous peoples will cease to protect forests.
But the authors found that virtually all indigenous lands
substantially inhibit deforestation up to 400 years after
contact with the national society. There was no correlation
between population density in indigenous areas and inhibition
of deforestation. In much of the Amazon, not only can protecting
nature be reconciled with human habitation it wouldn't
happen without the people.
Extensive intact forests on indigenous territories are central
to large-scale conservation in the Amazon. Last year, the
Brazilian government created a 5 million hectare mosaic of
different kinds of reserves in the Terra do Meio region of
Pará state. This connects two existing blocks of indigenous
lands into a continuous corridor of protected tropical forest
areas of 24 million hectares, the largest in the Amazon and
the world. With broad alliances of support from indigenous
groups, smallholder farmers, environmentalists, and government,
it is possible to create protected areas in the active frontier
of the Amazon and elsewhere. This is good news for governments
and environmental groups, who have assumed for years that
the most important tool for tropical forest conservation is
the creation of protected areas.
A tropical forest ecologist, Nepstad has studied Amazon forests
and strategies for their conservation for the last 21 years.
His research includes forest fires and "savannization",
the analysis of public policies to conserve the Amazon's natural
resources, the prediction of future trends of Amazon forests
and people, and the environmental certification of the region's
cattle ranchers and soy farmers. Based in Belém, Brazil,
he leads the Center's Amazon program. In 1995, he co-founded
the Amazon Institute of Environmental Studies (Instituto de
Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazônia), now the largest independent
research institution in the Amazon region. He has published
more than 75 scientific articles and books on the Amazon.
In 1994, he was awarded a Pew Scholars Fellowship in Conservation.
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