Survival analysis of a neotropical rainforest using multitemporal satellite imagery |
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Authors: | Jonathan Asher Greenberg Shawn C. Kefauver Corey J. Yeaton |
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Affiliation: | a NASA Ames Research Centre, United States b University of California, Davis, United States c Conservation Research Center, National Zoological Park, Smithsonian Institution, United States |
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Abstract: | ![]() We present results of an analysis of deforestation at a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, the Parque National Yasuní, located in the rainforests of eastern Ecuador using multitemporal Landsat TM and ETM+ satellite imagery. Using survival analysis, we assessed both current and future trends in deforestation rates, and investigated the impact of spatial, cultural, and economic factors on deforestation. These factors included the distance from roads, rivers, research facilities, oil facilities, markets and towns, and land ownership by colonists, native inhabitants, and an oil company. We found the annual rate of deforestation is currently only 0.11%, but that this rate is increasing with time and, assuming that the trend of increasing rate of forest loss continues, we would predict that by 2063, 50% of the forest within 2 km of an oil access road will be lost to unhindered colonization and anthropogenic conversion. The Quechua colonists are associated with areas of the highest rate of deforestation, followed by the native Huaorani and the lowest region of deforestation was in areas occupied by a local oil company. By far, the strongest predictor of where deforestation is predicted to occur was proximity to the road. Proximity to research sites, oil facilities, market, and rivers significantly decreases deforestation rates, and proximity to towns significantly increases deforestation rates. |
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Keywords: | Remote sensing Change detection Multitemporal Survival analysis Neotropical rainforests Deforestation Roads Ecuador Parque National Yasuní |
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