A productive friction: Leveraging misalignments between local ecological knowledge and remotely sensed imagery for forest conservation planning

IF 2.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Matt Clark, Haji Masoud Hamad, Jeffrey Andrews, Nicholas Kolarik, Kelly Hopping, Vicken Hillis, Monique Borgerhoff Mulder
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Abstract

Earth's forests are continually monitored by both the satellite record and the lived experiences of nearly 2 billion forest-proximate peoples. Generally, the satellite record summarizes production estimates, such as percent tree cover, at regular, relatively coarse scales. Conversely, local perceptions tend to capture changes at irregular and very fine scales. While the utility of both of these sources of information has been widely demonstrated in isolation, little work has explored in what contexts they are expected to correlate or deviate, or how they might be quantitatively integrated. Here, we collect gridded information on community perceived and remotely sensed mangrove cover change across 719 0.5-km grids in Pemba Island, Tanzania. We reveal variation in the association between these two data sources across different wards (shehia) and explore the reasons for this variation using interviews and direct observation. We find that shehia with the greatest alignment between perceived and remotely sensed mangrove change tended to have little planting or natural regeneration of mangrove propagules and large areas of complete cover loss. Alternatively, in shehia with the lowest alignment, we find high levels of natural and/or human-assisted mangrove recolonization and selective harvesting of individual trees and branches. These findings indicate that the alignment between local knowledge and satellite observations of mangrove cover change systematically increases with the scale of change in this system. Finally, we demonstrate a practical workflow for quantitatively leveraging these misalignments by optimizing across both data sources to identify restoration priority areas.

Abstract Image

富有成效的摩擦:利用当地生态知识与遥感图像之间的错位进行森林保护规划
地球上的森林一直受到卫星记录和近 20 亿亲近森林的人们的生活经验的监测。一般来说,卫星记录总结的是有规律的、相对粗略的生产估算,如树木覆盖率。相反,当地人的看法则倾向于捕捉不规则和非常精细尺度上的变化。虽然这两种信息来源的实用性已被广泛证实,但很少有人探讨它们在什么情况下会产生关联或偏差,或者如何将它们进行定量整合。在这里,我们收集了坦桑尼亚奔巴岛 719 个 0.5 公里网格中社区感知的红树林覆盖变化和遥感红树林覆盖变化的网格信息。我们揭示了这两种数据源在不同选区(shehia)之间的关联差异,并通过访谈和直接观察探讨了造成这种差异的原因。我们发现,感知到的红树林变化与遥感红树林变化最吻合的区往往很少种植红树林或红树林繁殖体的自然再生,而且有大面积的红树林植被完全消失。相反,在吻合度最低的酋長國,我們發現自然和/或人類協助的紅樹重新植根的程度很高,並有選擇性地採伐個別樹木和樹枝。这些发现表明,当地知识与卫星观测到的红树林植被变化之间的吻合度会随着该系统变化规模的扩大而系统地增加。最后,我们展示了一个实用的工作流程,通过优化两个数据源来定量利用这些错位,从而确定恢复的优先区域。
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来源期刊
Conservation Science and Practice
Conservation Science and Practice BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
6.50%
发文量
240
审稿时长
10 weeks
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