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

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

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