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32. | | SILVA, P. de S.; FIGUEIREDO, R. de O.; CUNHA, E. da S.; SCHULER, M.; MARKEWITZ, D.; DAVIDSON, E. A. Influência do uso da terra sobre a qualidade das águas de quatro igarapés na Amazônia Oriental: variabilidade espacial e sazonal de pH, condutividade elétrica, oxigênio dissolvido, temperatura, e turbidez. In: CONGRESSO DE ESTUDANTES E BOLSISTAS DO EXPERIMENTO LBA, 2., 2005, Manaus. Resumos... [S.l.]: LBA, [2005?]. p. 45. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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33. | | RANGEL-VASCONCELOS, L. G. T.; FIGUEIREDO, R. de O.; SCHULER, M. A. E.; MARKEWITZ, D.; DAVIDSON, E. A. Integration of biogeochemical and hydrological data in pasture and forest covered catchments in Eastern Amazonia. In: SCIENCE TEAM MEETING, 10., 2006, Brasília, DF. Book of Abstracts... Manaus: LBA-ECO, 2006. p. 49. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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34. | | CARVALHO, C. J. R. de; DAVIDSON, E. A.; SANTOS, T. P. dos; DUTRA, F. C.; SERRÃO, B. de O. Changing enzymatic activities and mycorrhizal infections in a chronosequence of secondary and mature forests of eastern Amazonia. In: CONFERÊNCIA CIENTÍFICA DO LBA, 3., 2004, Brasília, DF. Anais de trabalhos completos. Brasília, DF: LBA, 2004. Resumo 23.1. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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35. | | MARKEWITZ, D.; FIGUEIREDO, R. de O.; DAVIDSON, E. A.; BUSTAMANTE, M. M. C.; PARRON, L.; RESENDE, J. The chemistry of two streams draining kaolinitic soils. In: CONFERÊNCIA CIENTÍFICA DO LBA, 3., 2004, Brasília, DF. Anais de trabalhos completos. Brasília, DF: LBA, 2004. Plenária 6. Resumo 20.5. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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36. | | MARKEWITZ, D.; RESENDE, J. C. F.; PARRON, L.; BUSTAMANTE, M.; KLINK, C. A.; FIGUEIREDO, R. de O.; DAVIDSON, E. A. Dissolved rainfall inputs and streamwater outputs in an undisturbed watershed on highly weathered soils in the brazilian cerrado. Hydrological Processes, v. 20, n. 12, p. 2615-2639, Aug. 2006. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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38. | | FREITAS, J. F. B. de; SÁ, T. D. de A.; ISHIDA, F. Y.; SABÁ, R. T.; DAVIDSON, E. A.; FIGUEIREDO, R. de O. Alterações nas emissões de gases traço em função da substituição do sistema de produção agrícola de corte/queima pelo de corte/trituração/manejo de capoeira. In: SEMINÁRIO DE INICIAÇÃO CIENTÍFICA DA FCAP, 12.; SEMINÁRIO DE INICIAÇÃO CIENTÍFICA DA EMBRAPA AMAZÔNIA ORIENTAL, 6., 2002, Belém, PA. A contribuição do profissional de Ciências Agrárias no uso e conservação da biodiversidade: anais. Belém, PA: FCAP: Embrapa Amazônia Oriental, 2002. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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39. | | CARVALHO, C. J. R. de; DAVIDSON, E. A.; SANTOS, T. P. dos; FIGUEIREDO, R. de O.; SERRÃO, B. de O.; DUTRA, F. C. Atividade da fosfatase ácida, uréase e micorrizas em uma área de vegetação secundária de Paragominas, Estado do Pará, dois anos após adubação com nitrogênio e fósforo. In: CONFERÊNCIA CIENTÍFICA DO LBA, 3., 2004, Brasília, DF. Anais de trabalhos completos. Brasília, DF: LBA, 2004. Plenária 6. Resumo. Resumo 28.9-P. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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40. | | SIDDIQUE, I.; VIEIRA, I. C. G.; SCHIMIDT, S.; LAMB, D.; CARVALHO, C. J. R. de; FIGUEIREDO, R. de O.; BLOMBERG, S.; DAVIDSON, E. A. Nitrogen and phosphorus additions negatively affect tree species diversity tropical forest regrowth trajectories. Ecology, v. 91, n. 7, p. 2121-2131, 2010. Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
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Registro Completo
Biblioteca(s): |
Embrapa Amazônia Oriental. |
Data corrente: |
08/07/2005 |
Data da última atualização: |
30/11/2022 |
Tipo da produção científica: |
Artigo em Periódico Indexado |
Circulação/Nível: |
Internacional - A |
Autoria: |
VIEIRA, I. C. G.; ALMEIDA, A. S. de; DAVIDSON, E. A.; STONE, T. A.; CARVALHO, C. J. R. de; GUERRERO, J. B. |
Afiliação: |
IMA CÉLIA G. VIEIRA, MPEG; ARLETE SILVA DE ALMEIDA, MPEG; ERIC A. DAVIDSON, The Woods Hole Research Center; THOMAS A. STONE, The Woods Hole Research Center; CLAUDIO JOSE REIS DE CARVALHO, CPATU; JOSÉ BENITO GUERRERO, Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazônia. |
Título: |
Classifying successional forests using landsat spectral properties and ecological characteristics in eastern Amazônia. |
Ano de publicação: |
2003 |
Fonte/Imprenta: |
Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 87, n. 4, p. 470-481, 2003. |
Descrição Física: |
il. |
DOI: |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2002.09.002 |
Idioma: |
Inglês |
Conteúdo: |
Secondary forests may become increasingly important as temporary reservoirs of genetic diversity, stocks of carbon and nutrients, and moderators of hydrologic cycles in the Amazon Basin as agricultural lands are abandoned and often later cleared again for agriculture. We studied a municipality in northeastern Pará, Brazil, that has been settled for over a century and where numerous cycles of slash and burn agriculture have occurred. The forests were grouped into young (3?6 years), intermediate (10?20 years), advanced (40?70 years), and mature successional stages using 1999 Landsat 7 ETM imagery. Supervised classification of the imagery showed that these forest classes occupied 22%, 13%, 9%, and 6% of the area, respectively. Although this area underwent widespread deforestation many decades ago, forest of some type covers about 50% of the area. Row crops, tree crops, and pastures cover 8%, 20%, and 22%, respectively. The best separation among land covers appeared in a plot of NDVI versus band 5 reflectance. The same groupings of successional forests were derived independently from indices of similarity among tree species composition. Measured distributions of tree height and diameter also covaried with these successional classes, with the young forests having nearly uniform distributions, whereas multiple height and diameter classes were present in the advanced successional forests. Biomass accumulated more slowly in this secondary forest chronosequence than has been reported for other areas, which explains why the 70-year-old forests here were still distinguishable from mature forests using spectral properties. Rates of forest regrowth may vary across regions due to differences in edaphic, climatic, and historical land-use factors, thus rendering most relationships among spectral properties and forest age site-specific. Successional status, as characterized by species composition, biomass, and distributions of heights and diameters, may be superior to stand age as a means of stratifying these forests for characterization of spectral properties. MenosSecondary forests may become increasingly important as temporary reservoirs of genetic diversity, stocks of carbon and nutrients, and moderators of hydrologic cycles in the Amazon Basin as agricultural lands are abandoned and often later cleared again for agriculture. We studied a municipality in northeastern Pará, Brazil, that has been settled for over a century and where numerous cycles of slash and burn agriculture have occurred. The forests were grouped into young (3?6 years), intermediate (10?20 years), advanced (40?70 years), and mature successional stages using 1999 Landsat 7 ETM imagery. Supervised classification of the imagery showed that these forest classes occupied 22%, 13%, 9%, and 6% of the area, respectively. Although this area underwent widespread deforestation many decades ago, forest of some type covers about 50% of the area. Row crops, tree crops, and pastures cover 8%, 20%, and 22%, respectively. The best separation among land covers appeared in a plot of NDVI versus band 5 reflectance. The same groupings of successional forests were derived independently from indices of similarity among tree species composition. Measured distributions of tree height and diameter also covaried with these successional classes, with the young forests having nearly uniform distributions, whereas multiple height and diameter classes were present in the advanced successional forests. Biomass accumulated more slowly in this secondary forest chronosequence than has been reported... Mostrar Tudo |
Thesagro: |
Biodiversidade; Biomassa; Desmatamento; Ecologia Florestal; Floresta Secundaria; Sensoriamento Remoto. |
Thesaurus NAL: |
Amazonia. |
Categoria do assunto: |
-- |
Marc: |
LEADER 02979naa a2200289 a 4500 001 1407035 005 2022-11-30 008 2003 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d 024 7 $ahttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2002.09.002$2DOI 100 1 $aVIEIRA, I. C. G. 245 $aClassifying successional forests using landsat spectral properties and ecological characteristics in eastern Amazônia.$h[electronic resource] 260 $c2003 300 $cil. 520 $aSecondary forests may become increasingly important as temporary reservoirs of genetic diversity, stocks of carbon and nutrients, and moderators of hydrologic cycles in the Amazon Basin as agricultural lands are abandoned and often later cleared again for agriculture. We studied a municipality in northeastern Pará, Brazil, that has been settled for over a century and where numerous cycles of slash and burn agriculture have occurred. The forests were grouped into young (3?6 years), intermediate (10?20 years), advanced (40?70 years), and mature successional stages using 1999 Landsat 7 ETM imagery. Supervised classification of the imagery showed that these forest classes occupied 22%, 13%, 9%, and 6% of the area, respectively. Although this area underwent widespread deforestation many decades ago, forest of some type covers about 50% of the area. Row crops, tree crops, and pastures cover 8%, 20%, and 22%, respectively. The best separation among land covers appeared in a plot of NDVI versus band 5 reflectance. The same groupings of successional forests were derived independently from indices of similarity among tree species composition. Measured distributions of tree height and diameter also covaried with these successional classes, with the young forests having nearly uniform distributions, whereas multiple height and diameter classes were present in the advanced successional forests. Biomass accumulated more slowly in this secondary forest chronosequence than has been reported for other areas, which explains why the 70-year-old forests here were still distinguishable from mature forests using spectral properties. Rates of forest regrowth may vary across regions due to differences in edaphic, climatic, and historical land-use factors, thus rendering most relationships among spectral properties and forest age site-specific. Successional status, as characterized by species composition, biomass, and distributions of heights and diameters, may be superior to stand age as a means of stratifying these forests for characterization of spectral properties. 650 $aAmazonia 650 $aBiodiversidade 650 $aBiomassa 650 $aDesmatamento 650 $aEcologia Florestal 650 $aFloresta Secundaria 650 $aSensoriamento Remoto 700 1 $aALMEIDA, A. S. de 700 1 $aDAVIDSON, E. A. 700 1 $aSTONE, T. A. 700 1 $aCARVALHO, C. J. R. de 700 1 $aGUERRERO, J. B. 773 $tRemote Sensing of Environment$gv. 87, n. 4, p. 470-481, 2003.
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