Difficulties in tracking the long-term global trend in tropical forest area
- 15 January 2008
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 105 (2) , 818-823
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0703015105
Abstract
The long-term trend in tropical forest area receives less scrutiny than the tropical deforestation rate. We show that constructing a reliable trend is difficult and evidence for decline is unclear, within the limits of errors involved in making global estimates. A time series for all tropical forest area, using data from Forest Resources Assessments (FRAs) of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, is dominated by three successively corrected declining trends. Inconsistencies between these trends raise questions about their reliability, especially because differences seem to result as much from errors as from changes in statistical design and use of new data. A second time series for tropical moist forest area shows no apparent decline. The latter may be masked by the errors involved, but a "forest return" effect may also be operating, in which forest regeneration in some areas offsets deforestation (but not biodiversity loss) elsewhere. A better monitoring program is needed to give a more reliable trend. Scientists who use FRA data should check how the accuracy of their findings depends on errors in the data.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Predicting the Uncertain Future of Tropical Forest Species in a Data VacuumBiotropica, 2006
- Returning forests analyzed with the forest identityProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Testing Climate ReconstructionsScience, 2006
- Secondary forests as temporary carbon sinks? The economic impact of accounting methods on reforestation projects in the tropicsEcological Economics, 2005
- Forest Cover of Insular Southeast Asia Mapped from Recent Satellite Images of Coarse Spatial ResolutionAMBIO, 2003
- Secondary Forest Expansion in the Brazilian Amazon and the Refinement of Forest Transition TheorySociety & Natural Resources, 2003
- Satellites Spy More Forest Than ExpectedScience, 2002
- Constraints on modelling the deforestation and degradation of tropical open woodlandsGlobal Ecology and Biogeography, 1999
- Constraints on modelling the deforestation and degradation of tropical open woodlandsGlobal Ecology and Biogeography, 1999
- Ecological Correlations and the Behavior of IndividualsAmerican Sociological Review, 1950