Paving the REDD road in the Brazilian Amazon

15 de agosto de 2009

ago 15, 2009

Ane Alencar, Isabel Castro, Paulo Moutinho, Erika Pinto, Ricardo Rettmann, Osvaldo Stella, Cláudia Stickler

In this publication, IPAM briefly presents two on-the-ground initiatives with potential for REDD in the Brazilian Amazon that could be useful to create the basis of a National REDD regime in Brazil and, perhaps, in other tropical countries.

ALENCAR, A.; CASTRO, I.; MOUTINHO, P.; PINTO, E.; RETTMANN, R.; STELLA, O. e STICKLER, C. Paving the REDD Road in the Brazilian Amazon. Brasília/DF. June, 2009.

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Overview: Global fire regime conditions, threats, and opportunities for fire management in the tropics

Overview: Global fire regime conditions, threats, and opportunities for fire management in the tropics

The major sources of fire regime alteration worldwide include climate change, agriculture and ranching, deforestation, rural and urban development, energy production, fire exclusion and suppression, invasive species, plantations, and arson. Integrated fire management (IFM) is an approach that considers both damaging and beneficial fires within the context of the natural environments and socio-economic systems in which they occur. IFM takes into account fire ecology, socio-economic issues, and fire management technology to generate practical solutions to fire-related threats to biodiversity.