22 research outputs found

    Roles of fire history and rewetting in peatland restoration and vegetation recovery on the Merang peat dome, South Sumatra, Indonesia

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    In the restoration of drained and degraded tropical peat swamp forest (PSF) it is not well understood whether fire suppression on its own is sufficient to facilitate regeneration, or if rewetting plays a key role. We attempt to answer this question in the Merang area, a 23,000-ha peatland located in South Sumatra province, Indonesia. As with more than 90 % of PSF in Southeast Asia, the area has been largely degraded by logging and drainage canals, along with multiple fires. It has been designated and managed as an ecosystem restoration area since 2016, by which time only a single 254 ha patch of original PSF habitat remained. However, scattered remnant PSF trees ( 4 fires), while Macaranga pruinosa, Melicope glabra and Melicope lunu-ankenda dominate in regenerating areas that have experienced 12 fires. While fire suppression is essential to prevent further loss of vegetation, effective rewetting is required before woody vegetation can recover

    Parsing strategies: A concise survey

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    After the introduction of context-free grammars and the use of BNF rules, compilers have been built in which we can distinguish methods of syntax-analysis. While initially sometimes many different ideas were used to do syntax-analysis for a given programming language and grammar, later formalizations of these ideas have led to many different parsing methods. Each of these methods can be shown to be suitable for a certain subclass of the context-free grammars
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