Early Agriculture, Tropical Rainforests and Conservation in Papua New Guinea: Translating the Past into the Present
Date
2018
Authors
Denham, Timothy
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
UNESCO Publishing
Abstract
The island of New Guinea contains some of the most extensive tracts of tropical rainforest in the world. Like Am-azonia, the Congo Basin and Borneo, the tropical rainforests on New Guinea are today being heavily disturbed, degraded and destroyed by a combination of competing land uses, primarily subsistence and commercial agriculture, oil palm arboriculture and logging (Mack, 2014; Bryan, 2015; also see Tollefson, 2008; Ghazoul and Sheil, 2010). Yet, present-day human impacts on tropical rainforests need to be evaluated against long-term temporal trajectories during which people have acculturated, and effectively domesticated, these forest landscapes.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book chapter
Book Title
Exploring Frameworks for Tropical Forest Conservation
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 IGO (CC-BY-SA 3.0 IGO) license
DOI
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description