Publication | Closed Access
One Last Stand? Forests and Change on Ecuador's Eastern Cordillera
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Citations
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References
2002
Year
EngineeringForest RestorationLand UseForestryLand DegradationLast StandForest GovernanceEarth ScienceSocial SciencesAbstracttropical Montane ForestsEcological ImportanceBiogeographyForest ConservationLandscape ProcessesBiodiversityGeographyDeforestationForest Resource ManagementRemote Sensing
AbstractTropical montane forests are known for their ecological importance. Most montane forests in Ecuador have been converted to agriculture, and those that remain are concentrated on the eastern cordillera. Understanding of land‐use‐land‐cover change in this ecological zone is inadequate. Using remote sensing (Landsat tm, spot) and fieldwork, we document land‐use‐land‐cover change in two watersheds on Ecuador's eastern cordillera (Cañar Province). During the 1990s the region experienced a 0.58 percent annual rate of deforestation, but two areas within it show active signs of re/afforestation. Although conversion of forest to pasture for cattle grazing continues, human migration to the United States is likely to affect the trajectory of future land‐use‐land‐cover change.KeywordsAndes MountainsEcuadorland‐use‐land‐cover changemigrationtropical montane forests Additional informationNotes on contributorsBrad D. JokischDr. Jokisch is an assistant professor of geography at Ohio University, Athens, Ohio 45701.Bridget M. LairMs. Lair is an ecologist at the Western Ecological Research Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Henderson, Nevada 89014.
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