Hi My Friends: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., In Southeast Asia, the island of Borneo is home to one of the world’s
most diverse rainforests, but its natural resources are under threat.
Information from satellites is being used to evaluate the impact of the
island’s future development.
Male orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) in Borneo swamp forest.
Credits: Hatfield Consultants
The mountainous island is the third largest in the world. It is an area
of exceptional biological diversity and its natural resources have
tremendous social and economic value at local, national and global
levels.
While still of great importance, these resources have diminished in
recent years due to logging, plantation development, mining and forest
fires.
“The ecosystems in the heart of Borneo provide many local, regional and
global services and benefits,” said Anna van Paddenburg, Sustainable
Financing and Policy Strategy Leader for the World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
Indonesia.
“The mountainous forests form the headwaters of most of Borneo’s 20
major rivers, providing water for agriculture, human consumption, and
industry.
Forest cover loss and forest degradation under Business as Usual
scenario 2020, calculated using the IDRISI Land Change Modeller and
spatial analysis.
Credits: Hatfield Consultants.
“The forests provide timber and non-timber forest products, and store huge amounts of carbon.
“The diverse ecosystems support endemic plants and animals, which supports eco-tourism and pharmaceutical research.”
While it is widely recognised that healthy ecosystems provide services
that play a critical role in maintaining individual and societal
welfare, the benefits that flow from them are not always accounted for
in government and private sector decision-making.
In an effort to protect the environment and develop the area in a
sustainable way, the Heart of Borneo conservation agreement was
initiated by WWF and signed by the governments of Indonesia, Malaysia
and Brunei in 2007.
In December 2010, WWF initiated an assessment of Borneo’s natural
capital to quantify and understand the value of ecosystem services and
benefits.
ESA provided technical assistance through Hatfield Consultants, a
Canadian environmental and geomatics consulting company that has been
working in Indonesia for 20 years, and NEO BV, a value-adding data
provider.
Download:
HI-RES JPEG (Size: 1590 kb)
ESA’s GlobCover project provides a seamless land cover dataset
for the whole island of Borneo. Earth observation images from satellites
like DMC Deimos are important tools for detecting forest cover change. Credits: Hatfield Consultants / DMC International Imaging
The consortium closely collaborated with WWF and scientists from the
Natural Capital Project and the consulting agency Witteveen+Bos.
Satellite data from different ESA projects were used to build
development scenarios. Among the sources were global land cover data,
which show changes in land use in Borneo.
Plans and permits for plantation, forestry and mining were used along
with historical trends in land use to map contrasting Business-as-Usual
and Green Economy scenarios.
The Business-as-Usual scenario for forest cover projects a loss of 3.2
million hectares of primary and secondary forest cover on the island
between 2009 and 2020. This is primarily due to palm oil expansion,
mining and unsustainable forestry practices.
Implementing the Green Economy projection would reduce the loss of forest cover to an estimated 0.1 million hectares.
Download:
HI-RES JPEG (Size: 3042 kb)
Nutrient export calculated using InVEST Water Purification Model and
using the Business as Usual (left) and the Green Economy (right) land
cover and land use scenarios for year 2020.
Credits: Hatfield Consultants / InVEST
The scenarios were derived from the assessment of gains or losses of
ecosystem services using the Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem System
Services and Tradeoffs (InVEST) models, which were developed by Natural
Capital Project.
InVEST models include water yield, water purification, sediment
retention, carbon sequestration, habitat quality and biodiversity.
The team used several InVEST models, for example to demonstrate that
central Borneo provides water to 70% of the island’s population.
InVEST models were also used to demonstrate how water quality is
affected by large-scale palm oil development, since there is increased
nitrogen export due to extensive fertiliser use.
ESAGuillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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