Assessing the impact of Celaque National Park on forest fragmentation in western Honduras |
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Authors: | Jane Southworth Harini Nagendra Laura A. Carlson Catherine Tucker |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Geography, University of Florida, 3141 TUR, P.O. Box 117315, Gainesville, FL 32611-7315, USA;b Center for the Study of Institutions, Population, and Environmental Change (CIPEC), Indiana University, 408 North Indiana Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47408, USA |
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Abstract: | The effectiveness of parks as management regimes is much in debate. This study examines the effect of establishment of the Celaque National Park, Honduras, in 1987, on limiting deforestation through a comparison with the surrounding landscape using remote sensing, GIS and landscape pattern analysis. Pressure on the park region is found to relate spatially to the locations of towns and roads, with increasing deforestation in the landscape surrounding the park. In contrast, the park has been largely successful in maintaining forest cover. Although the extent of change within the park is not pronounced, the pattern of change is. Expansion of agriculture and coffee production have led to increasing pressure on the park boundaries, with as much as 25% of the landscape surrounding the park experiencing land cover change between 1996 and 2000. This has significant implications for the future of the park. |
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Keywords: | National Parks Remote sensing GIS Landscape Metrics Agricultural intensification Coffee |
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