53,997 research outputs found
Auctioning Conservation Contracts: An Application to the Flemish Afforestation Policy
This paper studies the possibility of using auctions as a policy instrument in conservation programs. In particular, it provides insight into the main concerns that need to be dealt with when implementing conservation auctions. To show the cost saving potential of this policy instrument, we also calculate the social welfare improvement that can be obtained for an afforestation project in Flanders. Creation-Date: 2006-03Auctions; Conservation contracts; Afforestation
Integrating efficiency and Equality considerations in the Evaluation of Public Policies: The Case of an Afforestation Programme in Poland
From an economics perspective, forest policy can be evaluated using an efficiency criterion, but also from a distributional perspective. An instrument that can combine both-the efficiency and distribution al cost-benefit analysis-is presented. The traditional social cost benefit matrix is extended with a matrix showing changes in the distribution of income in the population. A third matrix is also included, combining efficiency and distributional estimators in an abbreviated social welfare functions manner. The procedure is applied to the Polish programme of afforestation of agricultural lands in the 1990s. The study refers to afforestation îfinanced from national public funds on lands of both public and private ownership. The results show improvements in both the income distribution and the social welfare due to the afforestation program.Redistributive Effects, Project Evaluation, Forestry
Satellite evidence for significant biophysical consequences of the “Grain for Green” Program on the Loess Plateau in China
Afforestation has been implemented worldwide as regional and national policies to address environmental problems and to improve ecosystem services. China\u27s central government launched the “Grain for Green” Program (GGP) in 1999 to increase forest cover and to control soil erosion by converting agricultural lands on steep slopes to forests and grasslands. Here a variety of satellite data products from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer were used to assess the biophysical consequences of the GGP for the Loess Plateau, the pilot region of the program. The average tree cover of the plateau substantially increased because of the GGP, with a relative increase of 41.0%. The GGP led to significant increases in enhanced vegetation index (EVI), leaf area index, and the fraction of photosynthetically active radiation absorbed by canopies. The increase in forest productivity as approximated by EVI was not driven by elevated air temperature, changing precipitation, or rising atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. Moreover, the afforestation significantly reduced surface albedo, leading to a positive radiative forcing and a warming effect on the climate. The GGP also led to a significant decline in daytime land surface temperature and exerted a cooling effect on the climate. The GGP therefore has significant biophysical consequences by altering carbon cycling, hydrologic processes, and surface energy exchange and has significant feedbacks to the regional climate. The net radiative forcing on the climate depends on the offsetting of the negative forcing from carbon sequestration and higher evapotranspiration and the positive forcing from lower albedo
Participation of non-industrial private forest owners in National Forest Programmes: a discrete choice model for Northern Portugal
In countries where private forest ownership is very important, knowledge of the behaviour of private forest owners is useful for the design and implementation of successful forest policies. This applies to Portugal where 86 % of the forest lands are private property. This paper presents a study carried out in a region of the Northern part of the country covered by a local forest owners’ association. Based on individual data about the members of this association concerning some of their characteristics (implementation of publicly subsidised afforestation projects, size of the forest holdings, number of forest holdings belonging to the same owner and distance between the permanent residence of the owner and his forest holdings), a multinomial logit model is estimated for the probabilities of participation on public incentive schemes to finance individual and grouped afforestation projects.non industrial private forest owners, afforestation projects, public incentives
Zmiany struktury użytkowania ziemi w gospodarstwach rolnych województwa kujawsko-pomorskiego w świetle wyników spisów powszechnych rolnictwa z lat 2002 i 2010
The study presents the results of the spatial analysis of the total area of agricultural holdings as of 2010 and the changes in these figures as recorded in 2002 and 2010, whereby the agricultural acreage (including: arable lands, permanent crops and permanent grassland) and lands excluded from agricultural activities (including: forests, forestlands and other lands) are treated separately. It has been demonstrated that only in Kujavia-Pomerania region increased the total area of agricultural holdings, the agricultural acreage became slightly smaller (by 21 thousand ha) and the area of unutilised agricultural lands – in particular forests – enlarged (by 65.4 thousand ha in the case of forests and other land). The changes varied substantially across the regions as a result of both natural and historical conditions, on the one part, and the Common Agricultural Policy mechanisms, on the other part.Artykuł dotyczy wyników analizy przestrzennej stanu (2010 r.) oraz zmian (lata 2002–2010) ogólnej powierzchni gospodarstw rolnych, z wydzieleniem użytków rolnych (w tym: grunty orne, uprawy trwałe, trwałe użytki zielone) i gruntów nie użytkowanych rolniczo (w tym: lasy i grunty leśne oraz grunty pozostałe). Wykazano, że tylko w województwie kujawsko-pomorskim na tle kraju zwiększyła się ogólna powierzchnia gospodarstw rolnych; nieznacznie zmalała powierzchnia gruntów ornych (ubyło 21 tys. ha); równocześnie odnotowano wzrost areału gruntów nie użytkowanych rolniczo, w tym głównie lasów (przybyło 65,4 tys. ha lasów). Przemiany te były silnie zróżnicowane przestrzennie, uwarunkowane przyrodniczo, historycznie, a także są efektem oddziaływania instrumentów Wspólnej Polityki Rolnej
Contributions of natural and human factors to increases in vegetation productivity in China
Increasing trends in vegetation productivity have been identified for the last three decades for many regions in the northern hemisphere including China. Multiple natural and human factors are possibly responsible for the increases in vegetation productivity, while their relative contributions remain unclear. Here we analyzed the long-term trends in vegetation productivity in China using the satellite-derived normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and assessed the relationships of NDVI with a suite of natural (air temperature, precipitation, photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations, and nitrogen (N) deposition) and human (afforestation and improved agricultural management practices) factors. Overall, China exhibited an increasing trend in vegetation productivity with an increase of 2.7%. At the provincial scale, eleven provinces exhibited significant increases in vegetation productivity, and the majority of these provinces are located within the northern half of the country. At the national scale, annual air temperature was most closely related to NDVI and explained 36.8% of the variance in NDVI, followed by afforestation (25.5%) and crop yield (15.8%). Altogether, temperature, total forest plantation area, and crop yield explained 78.1% of the variance in vegetation productivity at the national scale, while precipitation, PAR, atmospheric CO2 concentrations, and N deposition made no significant contribution to the increases in vegetation productivity. At the provincial scale, each factor explained a part of the variance in NDVI for some provinces, and the increases in NDVI for many provinces could be attributed to the combined effects of multiple factors. Crop yield and PAR were correlated with NDVI for more provinces than were other factors, indicating that both elevated crop yield resulting from improved agricultural management practices and increasing diffuse radiation were more important than other factors in increasing vegetation productivity at the provincial scale. The relative effects of the natural and human factors on vegetation productivity varied with spatial scale. The true contributions of multiple factors can be obscured by the correlation among these variables, and it is essential to examine the contribution of each factor while controlling for other factors. Future changes in climate and human activities will likely have larger influences on vegetation productivity in China
The social & economic implications of alternative land uses involving pastoral farming and forestry in Northland : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Philosophy in Natural Resource and Environmental Economics at Massey University
This thesis is a scenario study which examines the social and economic impacts of different types of forestry being established in an area of pastoral farmland in Northland, New Zealand. Detailed production, income, expenditure, employment and demographic data was collected from 57 of the 59 farms in the study area. This included expenditure direction data. Those businesses and schools which supported, and were in turn supported by, the study area farms were interviewed to find out the importance of these farms to their continued operation. This pastoral farming scenario is then compared with four forestry scenarios - two conventional forestry scenarios, plus a woodlot and finally an agroforestry scenario. In the first conventional forestry scenario all the study area farms (15,000 hectares) are planted in exotics and in the second about 3,000 hectares are planted. With the two farm forestry scenarios about 1,000 hectares are planted. In the first conventional forestry scenario forestry replaces pastoral farming, while in the second and the farm forestry scenarios pastoral farming and forestry are integrated. Variable results resulted from the comparison, with expenditure comparisons very sensitive to the time harvesting commences, the amount cut and the time span of the scenarios. (Thirty-five years.) These comparisons were also sensitive to the locality in which farming and forestry expenditure were being compared. Forestry expenditure would be markedly higher than farming expenditure once harvesting commenced. But farming has higher backward linkage multipliers and unless forestry processing plants are established, the conventional forestry developments in the scenarios imply a relative decline in regional incomes and employment. If forestry processing plants are established, an increase in regional incomes and employment is implied. Woodlot and agroforestry generally imply an increase in expenditure and employment without the drop in agricultural spending associated with conventional forestry activities on former pastoral farmland. Conventional forestry would result in disruption to the existing social structure. It may result in a long term population decline, but it is likely many ex-farm houses would be re-occupied. Woodlot and agroforestry would strengthen the existing social and economic structure. It is concluded that the Northland United Council's interest and concern about the afforestation of pastoral farmland is justified. However, the rural decline, the corporatisation of government departments, plus the impacts of forestry harvesting and wood processing are considered to be of more importance in the establishment of regional planning priorities
Trees and water: smallholder agroforestry on irrigated lands in Northern India
Trees / Populus deltoids / Agroforestry / Afforestation / Reforestation / Models / Water use / Water balance / Evapotranspiration / Precipitation / Remote sensing / Irrigation requirements / India
The influence of organic amendments on soil aggregate stability from semiarid sites
Restoring the native vegetation is the most effective way to regenerate soil health. Under these conditions,
vegetation cover in areas having degraded soils may be better sustained if the soil is amended with an external
source of organic matter. The addition of organic materials to soils also increases infiltration rates and reduces
erosion rates; these factors contribute to an available water increment and a successful and sustainable land
management.
The goal of this study was to analyze the effect of various organic amendments on the aggregate stability
of soils in afforested plots.
An experimental paired-plot layout was established in southern of Spain (homogeneous slope gradient:
7.5%; aspect: N170). Five amendments were applied in an experimental set of plots: straw mulching; mulch with
chipped branches of Aleppo Pine (Pinus halepensis L.); TerraCotten hydroabsobent polymers; sewage sludge;
sheep manure and control. Plots were afforested following the same spatial pattern, and amendments were mixed
with the soil at the rate 10 Mg ha-1. The vegetation was planted in a grid pattern with 0.5 m between plants in
each plot. During the afforestation process the soil was tilled to 25 cm depth from the surface.
Soil from the afforested plots was sampled in: i) 6 months post-afforestation; ii) 12 months post-afforestation; iii)
18 months post-afforestation; and iv) 24 months post-afforestation. The sampling strategy for each plot involved
collection of 4 disturbed soil samples taken from the surface (0–10 cm depth). The stability of aggregates was
measured by wet-sieving.
Regarding to soil aggregate stability, the percentage of stable aggregates has increased slightly in all the
treatments in relation to control. Specifically, the differences were recorded in the fraction of macroaggregates (≥
0.250 mm). The largest increases have been associated with straw mulch, pinus mulch and sludge. Similar results
have been registered for the soil organic carbon content. Independent of the soil management, after six months, no
significant differences in microaggregates were found regarding to the control plots.
These results showed an increase in the stability of the macroaggregates when soil is amended with sludge,
pinus mulch and straw much. This fact has been due to an increase in the number cementing agents due to: (i) the
application of pinus, straw and sludge had resulted in the release of carbohydrates to the soil; and thus (ii) it has
favored the development of a protective vegetation cover, which has increased the number of roots in the soil and
the organic contribution to it.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech
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