Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15680
Title: Carbon stocks and losses to deforestation in protected areas in Brazilian Amazonia
Authors: Nogueira, Euler Melo
Yanai, Aurora Miho
Vasconcelos, Sumaia Saldanha de
Graça, Paulo Maurício Lima Alencastro de
Fearnside, Philip Martin
Issue Date: 2018
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Regional Environmental Change
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 18, Número 1, Pags. 261-270
Abstract: By 2014 approximately 2.2 million km2 (~43%) of Brazil’s Legal Amazonia region had been incorporated into an extensive network of 718 protected areas, which are comprised by 372 indigenous lands, 313 federal, state and municipal (county) conservation units, and 33 Maroon territories (Quilombos). Although protected areas occupy vast expanses in Amazonia, their importance as carbon reserves needs to be better understood. In this study, we estimate the total carbon in 2014 held in protected areas in Brazil’s “Legal Amazonia” and “Amazonia biome” regions, and the carbon loss in the portions of these protected areas that were cleared by 2014. In 2014, a total of 33.4 Pg C or 57.0% of all carbon stored in Legal Amazonia was held in protected areas and 32.7 Pg C or 58.5% of all the carbon stored in the Amazonia biome was held in protected areas. By 2014, carbon lost due to clearing in protected areas in Legal Amazonia and the Amazonia biome totaled, respectively, 0.787 (or 2.3%) and 0.702 (or 2.1%) Pg C if one assumes that previously each protected area was entirely covered by native vegetation. If the protection of these areas is effective, about half of the carbon in Brazilian Amazonia will be maintained. Carbon in protected areas has strategic value for environmental conservation and for mitigation of climate change because these areas are under lower risk of being emitted to the atmosphere than carbon stored in vegetation located outside of protected areas, although the effectiveness of protected areas varies. © 2017, The Author(s).
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1007/s10113-017-1198-1
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