Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Energy News .




WOOD PILE
80 percent of Malaysian Borneo degraded by logging
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 19, 2013


File image.

A study published in the July 17, issue of the journal PLOS ONE found that more than 80% of tropical forests in Malaysian Borneo have been heavily impacted by logging.

The Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak were already thought to be global hotspots of forest loss and degradation due to timber and oil palm industries, but the rates and patterns of change have remained poorly measured by conventional field or satellite approaches. A research team from the University of Tasmania, University of Papua New Guinea, and the Carnegie Institution for Science documented the full extent of logging in this region.

The team used the Carnegie Landsat Analysis System-lite (CLASlite) to reveal the vast and previously unmapped extent of heavily logged forest. CLASlite's high-resolution satellite imaging uncovered logging roads in Brunei and in the Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak on the island of Borneo.

CLASlite, developed by Carnegie's Greg Asner and team, has the unique ability to convert satellite images of seemingly dense tropical forest cover into highly detailed maps of deforestation and forest degradation. The user-friendly monitoring system has been made available to hundreds of governments, nongovernmental organizations, and academic institutions for use in mapping tropical forests.

Analysis of satellite imagery collected from 1990 and 2009 over Malaysian Borneo showed approximately 226,000 miles (364,000 km) of roads constructed throughout the forests of this region.

Nearly 80% of the land surface of Sabah and Sarawak was impacted by previously undocumented, high-impact logging or clearing operations. This finding contrasted strongly with neighboring Brunei, where 54% of the land area maintained intact unlogged forest.

Team leader Jane Bryan said: "There is a crisis in tropical forest ecosystems worldwide, and our work documents the extent of the crisis on Malaysian Borneo. Only small areas of intact forest remain in Malaysian Borneo, because so much has been heavily logged or cleared for timber or oil palm production.

Rainforests that previously contained lots of big old trees, which store carbon and support a diverse ecosystem, are being replaced with oil palm or timber plantations, or hollowed out by logging."

Only 8% and 3% of land area in Sabah and Sarawak, respectively, was covered by intact forests in designated protected areas. Very few forest ecosystems remain intact in Sabah or Sarawak. But Brunei has largely excluded industrial logging from its borders and has been comparatively successful in protecting its forests.

Greg Asner commented: "The results are sobering. The problem with previous monitoring reports is that they have been based on satellite mapping methods that have missed most of the forest degradation in Malaysian Borneo, and elsewhere throughout the tropics.

I'm talking about heavy logging that leaves a wake of forest degradation, even though the area may still look like forest in conventional satellite imagery. With the CLASlite system, we can see the effects of logging on the inner canopy of the forest. The system revealed extremely widespread degradation in this case."

Co-author of the study Phil Shearman said: "The extent of logging in Sabah and Sarawak documented in our work is breathtaking. The logging industry has penetrated right into the heart of Borneo and very little rainforest remains untouched by logging or clearfell in Malaysian Borneo. Brunei provides a stunning contrast. Most of Brunei's forests are still intact, as a result of largely excluding the logging industry from its borders.

The situation in these tropical forests is now so severe that any further sacrifice of intact ecosystems to the logging industry should be off the table." "

.


Related Links
Carnegie Institution
Forestry News - Global and Local News, Science and Application






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








WOOD PILE
Deforestation spikes in Brazil over last year: group
Brasilia, Brazil (AFP) July 18, 2013
Deforestation has soared in the Brazilian Amazon since a new forestry code was passed last year at the urging of the agribusiness lobby, a non-profit environmental group said Thursday. Between August 2012 and June 2013, 1,838 square kilometers (709 square miles) of forest were lost, a 103 percent hike over the same previous period, Institute Imazon said in its latest report. The biggest ... read more


WOOD PILE
Free market is best way to combat climate change

Australia to scrap carbon tax for emissions trading

Australia to ditch pollution levy by 2014

DOE: climate change to affect energy

WOOD PILE
Algerian energy sector in decline amid security concerns

Indonesian graft court jails third Chevron employee

Geothermal exploration causes quake in Switzerland

A 70-year-long experiment yields a result -- one drop of pitch

WOOD PILE
SOWITEC Mexico - strengthening its permitted project pipeline

Sky Harvest To Acquire Vertical Axis Wind Turbine Technology And Manufacturing Facilities

Wind Energy: Components Certification Helps Reduce Costs

Wind power does not strongly affect greater prairie chickens

WOOD PILE
MECASOLAR exceeds 400MW supply of solar PV trackers

China to impose duties on US, S. Korean solar material

Nautilus Solar Completes the First Project under the L.A. Clean Solar Program

SMA Compact MV Power Platform a Turnkey Solution for Utility-Scale PV Plants

WOOD PILE
S.Africa, EU seal nuclear energy deal

Chernobyl at Sea? Russia Building Floating Nuclear Power Plants

Greenpeace activists held after French nuclear plant break-in

Japan's former premier sues PM Abe

WOOD PILE
Drought response identified in potential biofuel plant

Euro Parliament committee endorses cap on using crops for biofuels

Japan, China and South Korea account for 84 percent of the macroalgae patents

Bacteria from Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia conceal bioplastic

WOOD PILE
Medical quarantine over for Shenzhou-10 astronauts

China's astronauts ready for longer missions

Chinese probe reaches record height in space travel

China's space tracking ship Yuanwang-5 berths at Jakarta for replenishment

WOOD PILE
EU hails China's commitment to climate change

Climate change could mean business opportunities, Britain says

Identifying climate impact hotspots across sectors

Pakistan to miss out on climate change funding?




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement