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Using real-time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of Africa's tropical protected areas

Tropical rainforests harbor a significant portion of the world's remaining biodiversity. Having undergone rapid changes in forest cover over the last two decades, a large amount of irreplaceable biodiversity has been lost. The establishment of protected areas has been a key strategy to hinder the lo...

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Main Author: Bowker, Jenna
Other Authors: Cumming, Graeme S
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Bowker, Jenna
author2 Cumming, Graeme S
author_browse Bowker, Jenna
Cumming, Graeme S
author_facet Cumming, Graeme S
Bowker, Jenna
author_sort Bowker, Jenna
collection Thesis
description Tropical rainforests harbor a significant portion of the world's remaining biodiversity. Having undergone rapid changes in forest cover over the last two decades, a large amount of irreplaceable biodiversity has been lost. The establishment of protected areas has been a key strategy to hinder the loss of tropical forests and biodiversity. However, the effectiveness of designating protected areas has been called into question, particularly in regions such as tropical Africa where widespread conditions of poverty, rapid population growth and political instability are evident. Quantitative measurements of park effectiveness for forest conservation are urgently needed, however accurate inferences concerning park effectiveness across broad regions is difficult. Whilst remote sensing techniques have been proposed as a practical solution, the intensity of data processing has made it untenable until recently. Here, I use remote-sensing methods to analyze high-resolution satellite imagery of tropical forest loss (as a proxy for tropical deforestation) within and outside 224 parks across 23 countries in Africa. I compare the extent of tropical forest loss inside parks to outside of them to show that the majority of African parks in the Subtropical and Tropical Moist Broadleaf forest biome are effective in curbing forest loss within park boundaries. However, certain parks were more effective in forest conservation than others. Whilst smaller parks were less effective at preventing forest loss inside park boundaries than larger parks, older parks were less effective than younger parks. Furthermore, parks of varying IUCN management categories exhibited negligible differences in forest loss between one another. Lastly, significant geographical variations in park effectiveness existed: West African parks exhibited the most forest loss within park boundaries and Central African parks exhibited the least. My results demonstrate the complexity of factors which influence a park's ability to curb forest loss within its boundaries. Furthermore, this study is the first bioregional-wide assessment of park effectiveness using remote sensing. These results supplement scarce literature on tropical deforestation in Africa and demonstrate the potential of using remote satellite imagery for measuring the relative impact of park establishment on forest conservation in this region.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
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publisher Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15579 Using real-time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of Africa's tropical protected areas Bowker, Jenna Cumming, Graeme S Conservation Biology Tropical rainforests harbor a significant portion of the world's remaining biodiversity. Having undergone rapid changes in forest cover over the last two decades, a large amount of irreplaceable biodiversity has been lost. The establishment of protected areas has been a key strategy to hinder the loss of tropical forests and biodiversity. However, the effectiveness of designating protected areas has been called into question, particularly in regions such as tropical Africa where widespread conditions of poverty, rapid population growth and political instability are evident. Quantitative measurements of park effectiveness for forest conservation are urgently needed, however accurate inferences concerning park effectiveness across broad regions is difficult. Whilst remote sensing techniques have been proposed as a practical solution, the intensity of data processing has made it untenable until recently. Here, I use remote-sensing methods to analyze high-resolution satellite imagery of tropical forest loss (as a proxy for tropical deforestation) within and outside 224 parks across 23 countries in Africa. I compare the extent of tropical forest loss inside parks to outside of them to show that the majority of African parks in the Subtropical and Tropical Moist Broadleaf forest biome are effective in curbing forest loss within park boundaries. However, certain parks were more effective in forest conservation than others. Whilst smaller parks were less effective at preventing forest loss inside park boundaries than larger parks, older parks were less effective than younger parks. Furthermore, parks of varying IUCN management categories exhibited negligible differences in forest loss between one another. Lastly, significant geographical variations in park effectiveness existed: West African parks exhibited the most forest loss within park boundaries and Central African parks exhibited the least. My results demonstrate the complexity of factors which influence a park's ability to curb forest loss within its boundaries. Furthermore, this study is the first bioregional-wide assessment of park effectiveness using remote sensing. These results supplement scarce literature on tropical deforestation in Africa and demonstrate the potential of using remote satellite imagery for measuring the relative impact of park establishment on forest conservation in this region. 2015-12-04T18:03:04Z 2015-12-04T18:03:04Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15579 eng application/pdf Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Conservation Biology
Bowker, Jenna
Using real-time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of Africa's tropical protected areas
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Using real-time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of Africa's tropical protected areas
title_full Using real-time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of Africa's tropical protected areas
title_fullStr Using real-time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of Africa's tropical protected areas
title_full_unstemmed Using real-time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of Africa's tropical protected areas
title_short Using real-time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of Africa's tropical protected areas
title_sort using real time forest loss alerts and global deforestation maps to assess the effectiveness of africa s tropical protected areas
topic Conservation Biology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15579
work_keys_str_mv AT bowkerjenna usingrealtimeforestlossalertsandglobaldeforestationmapstoassesstheeffectivenessofafricastropicalprotectedareas