Modelling conservation in the Amazon basin
Top Cited Papers
- 1 March 2006
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 440 (7083) , 520-523
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04389
Abstract
Expansion of the cattle and soy industries in the Amazon basin has increased deforestation rates and will soon push all-weather highways into the region's core1,2,3,4. In the face of this growing pressure, a comprehensive conservation strategy for the Amazon basin should protect its watersheds, the full range of species and ecosystem diversity, and the stability of regional climates. Here we report that protected areas in the Amazon basin—the central feature of prevailing conservation approaches5,6,7,8—are an important but insufficient component of this strategy, based on policy-sensitive simulations of future deforestation. By 2050, current trends in agricultural expansion will eliminate a total of 40% of Amazon forests, including at least two-thirds of the forest cover of six major watersheds and 12 ecoregions, releasing 32 ± 8 Pg of carbon to the atmosphere. One-quarter of the 382 mammalian species examined will lose more than 40% of the forest within their Amazon ranges. Although an expanded and enforced network of protected areas could avoid as much as one-third of this projected forest loss, conservation on private lands is also essential. Expanding market pressures for sound land management and prevention of forest clearing on lands unsuitable for agriculture are critical ingredients of a strategy for comprehensive conservation3,4.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tropical Deforestation and the Kyoto ProtocolClimatic Change, 2005
- Deforestation Control in Mato Grosso: A New Model for Slowing the Loss of Brazil's Amazon ForestAMBIO, 2003
- The local and global effects of Amazon deforestationJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 2002
- Cloud and rain processes in a biosphere‐atmosphere interaction context in the Amazon RegionJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 2002
- National Forests in the AmazonScience, 2002
- Frontier Governance in AmazoniaScience, 2002
- The spatial distribution of forest biomass in the Brazilian Amazon: a comparison of estimatesGlobal Change Biology, 2001
- Rethinking Tropical Forest Conservation: Perils in ParksConservation Biology, 2000
- A Conservation Gap Analysis of Brazil's Amazonian VegetationConservation Biology, 1995
- Amazonian Nature Reserves: An Analysis of the Defensibility Status of Existing Conservation Units and Design Criteria for the FutureConservation Biology, 1995