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1 hropogenic interferences (e.g., drainage and deforestation).
2 s for ecosystem services (e.g., avoidance of deforestation).
3 ce (i.e., fires, glaciation, hurricanes, and deforestation).
4 or their rosewood timber, along with general deforestation.
5 roperty rights, will be effective at curbing deforestation.
6 cent records show increased forest fires and deforestation.
7 rtified palm oil was associated with reduced deforestation.
8 climate benefits from reductions in tropical deforestation.
9 of above-ground biomass (AGB) stocks due to deforestation.
10 considered both on- and off-lease sources of deforestation.
11 mated annual carbon releases due to tropical deforestation.
12 hange may also provide opportunities to halt deforestation.
13 ing the environmental and social problems of deforestation.
14 minerals are critically important drivers of deforestation.
15 ional variation in the land uses that follow deforestation.
16 he spatial variability of impacts on avoided deforestation.
17 te change and requires their protection from deforestation.
18 use gas (GHG) emissions by sparing land from deforestation.
19 logical and social catastrophe attributed to deforestation.
20 hey effectively avoid degradation as well as deforestation.
21 line, as did a decline in the demand for new deforestation.
22 ltas, has been affected by river damming and deforestation.
23 forests and evaluated the relationship with deforestation.
24 d and protect their territories from illegal deforestation.
25 rea affected is now greater than that due to deforestation.
26 increasing pressure from land-use change and deforestation.
27 g in environmental degradation, particularly deforestation.
32 major roadblock for predicting how tropical deforestation affects climate is the lack of baseline co
33 mostly located in the tropics, where recent deforestation, agricultural intensification, and/or expo
35 s than anticipated from models incorporating deforestation alone because some species will colonize h
38 rs of forest PAs are typically restricted to deforestation, although the extent of forest degradation
39 ding better monitoring to detect small-scale deforestation and a shift toward more incentive-based co
40 on deforestation, but a majority of Brazil's deforestation and agricultural expansion has occurred in
42 mmitted emissions, we estimate that stopping deforestation and allowing secondary forests to grow wou
44 edieval and Renaissance periods is caused by deforestation and associated biomass burning Hg emission
45 and palm oil is one of the primary causes of deforestation and biodiversity loss in some of the world
48 cal peatlands have experienced high rates of deforestation and conversion, which is often associated
50 (iii) whether state PAs, CCs and ITs avoided deforestation and degradation compared with logging and
52 nd private Conservation Concessions (CCs) on deforestation and degradation throughout the Peruvian Am
53 propensity-score matching to assess: (i) how deforestation and degradation varied across governance r
55 ers with drastically different affinities to deforestation and document how thermal niche explains de
57 egies to mitigate climate change by reducing deforestation and forest degradation (e.g. REDD+) requir
61 d payments under the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) mechanism t
62 mly in the agenda of reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+) programs.
65 ts for reduced greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in tropical countri
66 50% compared to the baseline scenario, i.e., deforestation and forest degradation without REDD+) by 2
69 in the tropics, where the imbalance between deforestation and forest regrowth has large consequences
71 interviews, we quantify the impact of CAR on deforestation and forest restoration, investigating how
72 esult from forest growth; losses result from deforestation and from reductions in carbon density with
73 tive cloud formation driven by afforestation/deforestation and groundwater depletion projected to inc
74 atural (forest expansion) and anthropogenic (deforestation and human pressure) changes on the foragin
78 n underlying cause of this ambiguity is that deforestation and malaria influence each other in bidire
79 directional socioecological feedback between deforestation and malaria, which attenuates as land use
80 ntegrating bioclimatic models with projected deforestation and oil-palm agriculture suitability from
81 greatest threats to mangrove persistence are deforestation and other anthropogenic disturbances that
83 ond new concessions (15.0% of emissions from deforestation and peat degradation) to also include exis
84 or both carbon emissions from gross tropical deforestation and reductions in those emissions - its sh
85 d alongside current efforts aimed at halting deforestation and restoring the integrity of forests glo
86 f malaria in recent decades paralleled rapid deforestation and settlement in the Amazon basin, yet ev
89 Quantitative analysis of the nexus between deforestation and the emergence of Ebola virus disease (
90 reefs, this has resulted in widespread kelp deforestation and the formation of sea urchin barrens.
92 projects would avoid 1.1 million hectares of deforestation and US$ 7.6 billion in wasted funding for
94 etagrams, equivalent to 5-10 years of global deforestation, and an extinction debt of more than 140 b
95 th coastal communities experiencing mangrove deforestation are increasingly vulnerable to economic da
97 tory summer daytime temperature responses to deforestation are reported between observations and clim
98 ring bat meat and living in areas undergoing deforestation are the most significant risk factors asso
101 h show that a reduction of hot extremes with deforestation - as simulated in a number of CMIP5 models
102 within such concessions are at high risk of deforestation, as there are normally no legal hurdles to
103 with ASGM in Peru, this research shows that deforestation associated with ASGM is an additional mech
104 This difference is explained by increased deforestation associated with increased beef consumption
105 ef consumption under the subsidy and reduced deforestation associated with reduced beef consumption u
107 de that there is no substantive evidence for deforestation at Chaco and no obvious indications that t
111 that are found in the South American 'arc of deforestation', but which have been neglected in the des
112 and policy in Brazil have focused on Amazon deforestation, but a majority of Brazil's deforestation
115 ced under the revised law, could end illegal deforestation by greatly reducing the cost of monitoring
118 d tropical protected areas (PAs) that reduce deforestation can therefore play an important role in mi
119 re we show that tropical PAs overall reduced deforestation carbon emissions by 4.88 Pg, or around 29%
121 oing an intense process of fragmentation and deforestation caused by human-made changes to the enviro
122 tional park over a decade (~70% reduction in deforestation compared to a synthetic control, permuted
123 93 billion USD yr(-1), with avoided tropical deforestation comprising 30-54% of total mitigation.
124 this policy using annual nationwide data on deforestation, concession licenses, and potential agricu
126 and 2012, when compared to expected rates of deforestation controlling for spatial variation in defor
127 turbance in the Amazon occurs in the form of deforestation (conversion of forest to non-forest land c
130 he largest landholders (>2,500 ha) to annual deforestation decreased over time (63% decrease between
131 time series analysis of Landsat data to map deforestation, degradation, and natural disturbance in t
134 ive anthropogenic degradation in the form of deforestation, drainage and fire are converting it into
135 ement in the Amazon basin, yet evidence of a deforestation-driven increase in malaria remains equivoc
137 tC by 2100) but also indirectly through less deforestation due to higher crop yields (16 GtC by 2100)
138 d near-ground insectivores in the absence of deforestation, edge effects or other direct anthropogeni
139 re and edge varies across Brazil, suggesting deforestation effects on communities, and hence the most
140 recently available forest loss data to test deforestation effects on International Union for Conserv
141 s to vary greatly, even from "leakage," more deforestation elsewhere, to "blockage," less deforestati
144 multaneous regrowth, the net contribution of deforestation emissions to rising atmospheric CO2 concen
145 dioxide have been far less significant than deforestation, even when accounting for inter-annual var
147 reak occurring in a site is linked to recent deforestation events, and that preventing the loss of fo
152 e of recent societies, linked to large-scale deforestation, extensive and intensive agriculture, reso
164 palities across 13 y (2003 to 2015) and show deforestation has a strong positive effect on malaria in
165 While the effectiveness of PAs in reducing deforestation has been estimated, the impact on global c
167 n relatively intact landscapes; even minimal deforestation has had severe consequences for vertebrate
170 ing positive incentives for farmers to forgo deforestation have been designed but not fully implement
172 ear to what extent emissions from old-growth deforestation have been offset by secondary forest growt
173 watershed in Madre de Dios, Peru, mining and deforestation have increased exponentially since the 198
174 ferences in land-use policies, resulting in "deforestation havens." We analyze the determinants of in
176 and control measures on larger properties in deforestation hotspots, may be increasingly limited in t
177 sis to understand the impacts of large-scale deforestation in India on monsoon precipitation and foun
178 e most prominent proximate cause of tropical deforestation in Latin America, a region characterized b
179 roduction or consumption is unlikely to halt deforestation in M&I in the absence of active forest con
180 reasing carbon emissions from gross tropical deforestation in many other tropical countries that, fro
182 rs (i.e., replacement land uses) of mangrove deforestation in Southeast Asia between 2000 and 2012.
184 Our study supports the expectation that deforestation in the Amazon River floodplain affects not
185 Our study highlights frontiers of mangrove deforestation in the border states of Myanmar, on Borneo
189 ind that the remote forcing from large-scale deforestation in the northern middle and high latitudes
193 iques to investigate the association between deforestation in time and space, with EVD outbreaks in C
194 es (involving, for example, afforestation or deforestation) in different geologic and climate regions
195 other in bidirectional causal relationships-deforestation increases malaria through ecological mecha
197 DIC became significantly more enriched with deforestation, indicating a shift in source and processe
198 To reduce greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation, Indonesia instituted a nationwide morator
199 er cent of delta growth can be attributed to deforestation-induced increases in fluvial sediment supp
201 plemented, indigenous property rights reduce deforestation inside indigenous territories in the Amazo
204 model's near-surface temperature response to deforestation is consistent with recent observations, an
206 sion, most oil palm expansion and associated deforestation is occurring outside large agro-industrial
207 ut 1 degrees C over the last 60 y, and total deforestation is reaching 20% of the forested area.
212 o forest margins fragmented and disturbed by deforestation may be particularly exposed to zoonotic in
213 its may be more cost effective, and mangrove deforestation more damaging, than previously thought.
215 tical turmoil are likely to have reduced the deforestation of subalpine environments and caused wides
222 impact of land use changes and human driven deforestation on fire frequency and population exposure
223 t sequencing, we characterize the effects of deforestation on microbial communities across multiple b
230 concessions (21.1% of emissions) and address deforestation outside of concessions and protected areas
231 2000 to 2010, then nationwide emissions from deforestation over that decade would have been 241-615 M
232 Mangrove forests have experienced extensive deforestation owing to global demand for commodities, an
236 For future land cover, we developed spatial deforestation predictions from 10 years of satellite dat
238 opulation growth in relation to the parallel deforestation process adopting a statistical point of vi
239 Amazonian climate, vegetation, fires and the deforestation process to help to support future research
241 matic and highly significant increase in the deforestation rate for the majority of these areas and t
243 protect intact forests are necessary to slow deforestation rates and to avert a new wave of global ex
244 tablishment, we show that protection reduces deforestation rates by 150% relative to unprotected port
245 or logging in Indonesia increased site-level deforestation rates by 17-127%, 44-129%, or 3.1-11.1%, r
250 ng to pay US$250 million to Guyana if annual deforestation rates remained below 0.056% from 2010 to 2
251 in Latin America, a region characterized by deforestation rates substantially above the world averag
252 Registered properties initially showed lower deforestation rates than unregistered ones, but these di
253 sing aerosol and carbon dioxide emissions on deforestation rates, without accounting for forest degra
257 e aforementioned feedback, which occurs when deforestation reduces transpiration to a point where the
258 In this pantropic study, conducted in active deforestation regions of Indonesia, Cameroon, and Peru,
259 g deforestation leakage requires harmonizing deforestation regulations across regions and commodities
260 the availability of cheap forestland, lower deforestation regulations attract investments by compani
264 e-associated deforestation, to estimate the "deforestation risk" (in hectares/year) of each supply ch
265 ecedented insight into the global trade of a deforestation-risk commodity and demonstrate the potenti
267 carbon capture and storage and afforestation/deforestation, showed that all NETs have significant lim
269 edge, of actor-specific contributions to the deforestation slowdown by linking agricultural census an
271 editing baselines assume consistently higher deforestation than counterfactual forest loss in synthet
272 rest loss during this time and 12 times more deforestation than occurred within mining leases alone.
273 esis is that federal PAs avoid more internal deforestation than state PAs since federal agencies cons
274 alysis support a decoupling between fire and deforestation that has exacerbated forest degradation in
275 in conservation biology because of the rapid deforestation that has occurred over the last 50 years.
276 nnual rates and spatial patterns of tropical deforestation that occurred between 1950 and 2009 in the
277 ropland expansion is a significant driver of deforestation, these results have important implications
278 gh ecological mechanisms and malaria reduces deforestation through socioeconomic mechanisms-and that
280 spatially explicit data on cattle-associated deforestation, to estimate the "deforestation risk" (in
283 Further, in laboratory experiments, the more deforestation-tolerant species has critical thermal limi
286 onse to increased forest loss at the "Arc of Deforestation." Tropical forests, which have adapted to
291 xpansion of woody vegetation prior to modern deforestation, which could help inform conservation and
292 ve and could consolidate progress in slowing deforestation while providing a framework for addressing
293 operty rights show a significant decrease in deforestation, while the effect does not exist in territ
294 of these patterns allows us to predict where deforestation will have the strongest effects on soil bi
296 erences in LULC between 1987 and 2005 showed deforestation with conversion of forest land to crop lan
297 ipitation changes depends on the location of deforestation, with remote effects showing a larger infl
299 cement, extensive road paving, and increased deforestation) would substantially mitigate the effects
300 tween indigenous land management and avoided deforestation, yet few have accounted for forest degrada