Unaccounted natural vegetation loss in Brazilian Amazon

Cassiano Gustavo Messias,Cláudio Almeida,Daniel Silva, Luciana Soler, L. E. P. Maurano, Vagner Luis Camilotti, Fábio Alves, Libério Silva, Thiago Lima,Vivian Fróes Renó, Deborah Correia-Lima, Amanda P. Belluzzo, Camila Barata Quadros, Delmina Barradas,Douglas Rafael Vidal de Moraes, Eduardo Marcelino Bastos, Igor Cunha, Jefferson S. Souza, Lucélia Souza de Barros, L. H. Gusmão,Rodrigo de Almeida, Dayane Michelly Oliveira de Moraes,D. Silva, Eduardo Chrispim, Manoel Rodrigues Neto, M. Matos, Noeli Moreira, Rafael Silva Teixeira, Gabriel Alves,Ana Carolina Andrade, Letícia Palazzi Perez,Mariane Souza Reis, Bruna Maria Pechini Bento, Hélio Cordeiro Manso Filho, Igor Santos, Liliane Araújo, Maíra Ramalho Matias, Murilo Silva, Fábio Pinheiro, André F. Araújo de Carvalho,Harón Abrahim Magalháes Xaud,Maristela Ramalho Xaud, Ana Paula Matos,Luís Rodrigo Fernandes Baumann, Elaine Silva,Laerte Guimarães Ferreira, Joana Pinto,Marcos Adami

Research Square (Research Square)(2023)

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摘要
Abstract Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has been monitored since 1988 by the Brazilian Amazon Satellite Monitoring Program (PRODES Amazonia), and its data has been pivotal in guiding environmental public policies in the country. While forest formations are officially supported by a monitoring program, a significant portion of the Amazon biome (6.6 % or ~280,000 km²) constituted by non-forest (NF) phytophysiognomies (e.g., savanna, grasslands, flood lands) are still unmonitored. To address this information gap, the PRODES NF system was built. First findings based on PRODES NF monitoring indicate that the Brazilian Amazon lost 10.46% (~30,000 km²) of NF area, mostly in the last two decades. The states of Mato Grosso, Roraima and Amapá emerged as the primary hotspots of losses. Among the phytophysiognomies, savannas were the most affected. A strong correlation between NF loss and deforestation was revealed in the Amazon biome, with no statistical differences in terms of relative area, suggesting a continuum of vegetation loss along this biome that does not discriminate between forest and non-forest. Finally, PRODES Amazonia and PRODES NF together provide relevant official data that sum up a total of vegetation loss of ~798.000 km² in the Brazilian Amazon (~19% of the entire biome).
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unaccounted natural vegetation loss
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