1. Identificação | |
Tipo de Referência | Capítulo de Livro (Book Section) |
Site | plutao.sid.inpe.br |
Código do Detentor | isadg {BR SPINPE} ibi 8JMKD3MGPCW/3DT298S |
Identificador | J8LNKAN8RW/3ARN8F5 |
Repositório | dpi.inpe.br/plutao/2011/11.23.17.14.36 |
Última Atualização | 2012:01.31.11.32.20 (UTC) secretaria.cpa@dir.inpe.br |
Repositório de Metadados | dpi.inpe.br/plutao/2011/11.23.17.14.37 |
Última Atualização dos Metadados | 2018:06.05.00.01.33 (UTC) administrator |
ISBN | 978-953-307-384-2 |
Rótulo | lattes: 0333390666972274 3 ToledoViCaArCoGo:2011:BiEcCo |
Chave de Citação | ToledoViCaArCoGo:2011:BiEcCo |
Título | Biodiversity, Ecosystem and Commodities in Amazonia |
Ano | 2011 |
Data de Acesso | 18 maio 2024 |
Tipo Secundário | PRE LI |
Número de Arquivos | 1 |
Tamanho | 828 KiB |
|
2. Contextualização | |
Autor | 1 Toledo, Peter 2 Vieira, Ima Célia 3 Camara, Gilberto 4 Araújo, Roberto 5 Coelho, Andrea 6 Gomes, Sergio |
Grupo | 1 CST-CST-INPE-MCT-BR 2 CST-CST-INPE-MCT-BR 3 CST-CST-INPE-MCT-BR 4 CST-CST-INPE-MCT-BR |
Afiliação | 1 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE) 2 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE) 3 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE) 4 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE) 5 Instituto de Desenvolvimento Econômico, Social e Ambiental do Pará 6 Instituto de Desenvolvimento Econômico, Social e Ambiental do Pará |
Endereço de e-Mail do Autor | 1 2 3 gilberto.camara@inpe.br |
Editor | Pachura, Piotr |
Endereço de e-Mail | gilberto.camara@inpe.br |
Título do Livro | The Systemic Dimension of Globalization |
Editora (Publisher) | InTech |
Cidade | Rijeka, Croácia |
Volume | cap. 10 |
Páginas | 195-208 |
Histórico (UTC) | 2011-11-24 11:03:15 :: lattes -> secretaria.cpa@dir.inpe.br :: 2011 2012-01-31 11:36:03 :: secretaria.cpa@dir.inpe.br -> administrator :: 2011 2018-06-05 00:01:33 :: administrator -> marciana :: 2011 |
|
3. Conteúdo e estrutura | |
É a matriz ou uma cópia? | é a matriz |
Estágio do Conteúdo | concluido |
Transferível | 1 |
Tipo do Conteúdo | External Contribution |
Palavras-Chave | Amazonian Region |
Resumo | The Amazonian Region has undergone constant pressure from human activities in the past 100 years, with dramatic changes in the landscapes caused by significant impacts on a great number of rainforest biotic communities. Historical data show that the last pulse of expansion of the forest, which initiated 4-5,000 years ago (Burnham & Johnson, 2004; Bush & Silman, 2007), has been permanently halted due to intensification of land use and occupation along the southern ecological contact zone between the forest and savanna ecosystems. Such a pristine environment, in similar scale and richness as witnessed by the first Europeans who arrived in South America and wrestled the land from the Native South Americans, can no longer be preserved or even restored to its original state. Almost twenty percent of the primeval Amazon tropical forest has been altered or destroyed in Brazil, the country that encompasses most of this diverse biome. An important portion of this original information is now preserved in maps, natural history and anthropology books and scientific collections (Moran & Ostrom, 2009). Such documentation showing different pathways from these past 500 years is crucial to understand and learn from experiences of success and failure. Resiliency, adaptation and modification of a tropical environment rich in biodiversity have shaped a dynamic biome that shifted in magnitude and intensity in the past decades due to human activity (Joels & Camara, 2001; Buckeridge, 2008). Understanding these successive events is one of the most important challenges facing the modern scientific community. Accurate information on science and technology can potentially improve the future management of a complex tropical environment. The current trend of environmental awareness as reflected in the conservation, ecological services, global change and sustainable activities at odds with economic growth and tensions caused by social injustice in tropical regions have placed Amazonia under a worldwide spotlight in terms of collective consciousness for nature preservation. To reduce human impact and simultaneously preserve indigenous and other traditional cultures have been top priorities in the agendas of most Non Governmental Organizations. The level of scientific publications on different aspects of biological diversity in Brazilian Amazonia has been constantly improving. Similarly, public and private institutions are experiencing new and more thorough forms of partnership, with mutually complementary agendas, joining forces toward common goals in multidisciplinary approaches. Such actions and institutional strategies are closing the knowledge gap on the measuring of the impact of deforestation on species ecology and habitat losses, as it has been perceived that natural landscapes are being destroyed much faster than one could possibly understand the functioning of such ecosystems and organisms (Stuart et. al. 2010). With population growth at current rates, more land for agriculture and energy supply will be demanded. In this context, a new trend of pressure wave on the Amazonian forest has initiated. The high potential for hydroelectric power and the availability of extensive areas for food and biofuel production are additional threats to conservation efforts. A globalized world and the current Amazonian economic strength exerts increasing demands for productive terrains, increasing the tension on deforestation and land use. In this chapter we will address the dynamics of human occupation of Amazon biome, present the problems and perspectives of the main commodities in Para state and discuss the mechanism of Reducing Emission from Forest Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) and the challenges for solving the infrastructure/biological conservation duality in Amazonia. |
Área | CST |
Arranjo | urlib.net > BDMCI > Fonds > Produção anterior à 2021 > COCST > Biodiversity, Ecosystem and... |
Conteúdo da Pasta doc | acessar |
Conteúdo da Pasta source | InTech-Biodiversity_ecosystem_and_commodities_in_amazonia-1.pdf | 31/01/2012 09:32 | 827.8 KiB | |
Conteúdo da Pasta agreement | não têm arquivos |
|
4. Condições de acesso e uso | |
URL dos dados | http://urlib.net/ibi/J8LNKAN8RW/3ARN8F5 |
URL dos dados zipados | http://urlib.net/zip/J8LNKAN8RW/3ARN8F5 |
Idioma | pt |
Arquivo Alvo | InTech-Biodiversity_ecosystem_and_commodities_in_amazonia-1.pdf |
Grupo de Usuários | lattes secretaria.cpa@dir.inpe.br |
Visibilidade | shown |
|
5. Fontes relacionadas | |
Unidades Imediatamente Superiores | 8JMKD3MGPCW/3F3T29H |
Lista de Itens Citando | sid.inpe.br/bibdigital/2013/10.19.20.40 1 |
URL (dados não confiáveis) | http://www.intechopen.com/articles/show/title/biodiversity-ecosystem-and-commodities-in-amazonia |
Acervo Hospedeiro | dpi.inpe.br/plutao@80/2008/08.19.15.01 |
|
6. Notas | |
Campos Vazios | archivingpolicy archivist callnumber copyholder copyright creatorhistory descriptionlevel dissemination documentstage doi edition format issn lineage mark mirrorrepository nextedition notes numberofvolumes orcid parameterlist parentrepositories previousedition previouslowerunit progress project readergroup readpermission resumeid rightsholder schedulinginformation secondarydate secondarykey secondarymark serieseditor seriestitle session shorttitle sponsor subject tertiarymark tertiarytype translator versiontype |
|
7. Controle da descrição | |
e-Mail (login) | marciana |
atualizar | |
|