摘要
Road construction and paving bring socio-economic benefits to receiving regions but can also be drivers of deforestation and land cover change. Road infrastructure often increases migration and illegal economic activities, which in turn affect local hydrology, wildlife, vegetation structure and dynamics, and biodiversity. To evaluate the full breadth of impacts from a coupled natural-human systems perspective, information is needed over a sufficient timespan to include pre- and post-road paving conditions. In addition, the spatial scale should be appropriate to link local human activities and biophysical system components, while also allowing for upscaling to the regional scale. A database was developed for the tri-national frontier in the Southwestern Amazon, where the Inter-Oceanic Highway was constructed through an area of high biological value and cultural diversity. Extensive socio-economic surveys and botanical field work are combined with remote sensing and reanalysis data to provide a rich and unique database, suitable for coupled natural-human systems research.
| 源语言 | 英语 |
|---|---|
| 文章编号 | 93 |
| 期刊 | Scientific Data |
| 卷 | 6 |
| 期 | 1 |
| DOI | |
| 出版状态 | 已出版 - 1 12月 2019 |
| 已对外发布 | 是 |
联合国可持续发展目标
此成果有助于实现下列可持续发展目标:
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可持续发展目标 15 陆地生物
指纹
探究 'A spatiotemporal natural-human database to evaluate road development impacts in an Amazon trinational frontier' 的科研主题。它们共同构成独一无二的指纹。引用此
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