Citações 2013 – 2012 – 2011

Essa página apresenta uma lista de artigos em revistas científicas que fazem citação / referência ao PRODES

Essa lista não é exaustiva e estará sempre sendo complementada. Caso você queira indicar um trabalho, que faça referência ao PRODES, e que ainda não apareça na página envie uma mensagem para prodes@dpi.inpe.br.

*** Até 03/11/2025: 1.739 artigos em 560 periódicos ***

* As referências estão apresentadas no padrão ABNT em ordem decrescente de data da publicação.

(Use o <CTRL + “F”>, ou outra função que permita a busca na página de seu navegador, para buscar uma referência em particular)

Acesso por ano:

2025202420232022202120202019201820172016201520142013
2012201120102009200820072006200520042003200220012000
199919981997199619941992

2013*

  1. ACHBERGER, C. et al. State of the climate in 2012. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, v. 94, n. 8, p. S1–S238, 2013.
  2. AIDE, T. M. et al. Deforestation and Reforestation of Latin America and the Caribbean (2001-2010). Biotropica, v. 45, n. 2, p. 262–271, 2013.
  3. AMARAL, S. et al. Riverine communities as socio-spatial units of the urban process in Amazon: A typology for the lower Tapajós River (State of Pará, Brazil) [Comunidades ribeirinhas como forma socioespacial de expressão urbana na Amazônia: Uma tipologia para a região do Baixo Tapajós (Pará-Brasil)]. Revista Brasileira de Estudos de Populacao, v. 30, n. 2, p. 367–399, 2013.
  4. ARVOR, D. et al. Mapping and spatial analysis of the soybean agricultural frontier in Mato Grosso, Brazil, using remote sensing data. GeoJournal, v. 78, n. 5, p. 833–850, 2013.
  5. BALCH, J. K. et al. Effects of high-frequency understorey fires on woody plant regeneration in southeastern Amazonian forests. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, v. 368, n. 1619, 2013.
  6. BARRETTO, A. G. O. P. et al. Agricultural intensification in Brazil and its effects on land-use patterns: An analysis of the 1975-2006 period. Global Change Biology, v. 19, n. 6, p. 1804–1815, 2013.
  7. BOUCHER, D.; ROQUEMORE, S.; FITZHUGH, E. Brazil’s success in reducing deforestation. Tropical Conservation Science, v. 6, n. 3, p. 426–445, 2013.
  8. BROWN, S.; ZARIN, D. What does zero deforestation mean? Science, v. 342, n. 6160, p. 805–807, 2013.
  9. CAETANO, M. A. L.; GHERARDI, D. F. M.; YONEYAMA, T. A constraint satisfaction method applied to the problem of controlling the CO<inf>2</inf> emission in the Legal Brazilian Amazon. Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, v. 392, n. 21, p. 5322–5329, 2013.
  10. CANO, W. Amazonia: From crisis to an atypical truncated integration [Amazônia: da crise à integração atípica e truncada]. America Latina en la Historia Economica, v. 20, n. 2, p. 67–95, 2013.
  11. CASATTI, L. et al. The stream fish fauna from the rio Machado basin, Rondônia State, Brazil. Check List, v. 9, n. 6, p. 1496–1504, 2013.
  12. CHEN, Y. et al. Long-term trends and interannual variability of forest, savanna and agricultural fires in South America. Carbon Management, v. 4, n. 6, p. 617–638, dez. 2013.
  13. COE, M. T. et al. Deforestation and climate feedbacks threaten the ecological integrity of south-southeastern Amazonia. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, v. 368, n. 1619, 2013.
  14. DALE, A. T. et al. Modeling future life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions and environmental impacts of electricity supplies in Brazil. Energies, v. 6, n. 7, p. 3182–3208, 2013.
  15. DE SOUZA, R. A.; MIZIARA, F.; DE MARCO JUNIOR, P. Spatial variation of deforestation rates in the Brazilian Amazon: A complex theater for agrarian technology, agrarian structure and governance by surveillance. Land Use Policy, v. 30, n. 1, p. 915–924, 2013.
  16. DEFRIES, R. et al. Export-oriented deforestation in Mato Grosso: Harbinger or exception for other tropical forests? Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, v. 368, n. 1619, 2013.
  17. DINIZ, F. H. et al. Livelihood strategies in settlement projects in the Brazilian Amazon: Determining drivers and factors within the Agrarian Reform Program. Journal of Rural Studies, v. 32, p. 196–207, 2013a.
  18. DINIZ, F. H. et al. From space and from the ground: Determining forest dynamics in settlement projects in the Brazilian Amazon. International Forestry Review, v. 15, n. 4, p. 442–455, 2013b.
  19. EGLER, M. et al. Indicators of deforestation in the Southern Brazilian Pre-Amazon. Regional Environmental Change, v. 13, n. 2, p. 263–271, 2013.
  20. FEARNSIDE, P. M.; FIGUEIREDO, A. M. R.; BONJOUR, S. C. M. Amazonian forest loss and the long reach of China’s influence. Environment, Development and Sustainability, v. 15, n. 2, p. 325–338, 2013.
  21. FERREIRA, M. E. et al. Modeling landscape dynamics in the central Brazilian savanna biome: Future scenarios and perspectives for conservation. Journal of Land Use Science, v. 8, n. 4, p. 403–421, 2013.
  22. GALFORD, G. L.; SOARES-FILHO, B.; CERRI, C. E. P. Prospects for land-use sustainability on the agricultural frontier of the Brazilian Amazon. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, v. 368, n. 1619, 2013.
  23. GALLI, E. Framing land use changes in the expansion of Brazilian ethanol production. International Journal of Sustainable Society, v. 5, n. 2, p. 178–194, 2013.
  24. GANEM, R. S.; DRUMMOND, J. A.; FRANCO, J. L. D. A. Conservation polices and control of habitat fragmentation in the brazilian cerrado biome. Ambiente e Sociedade, v. 16, n. 3, p. 99–118, 2013.
  25. GARCIA TELES, C. B. et al. Epidemiological aspects of american cutaneous leishmaniasis and phlebotomine sandfly population, in the municipality of monte negro, state of Rondônia, Brazil. Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical, v. 46, n. 1, p. 60–66, 2013.
  26. GARCÍA-DIÉGUEZ, C.; BERNARD, O.; ROCA, E. Reducing the Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1 for its application to an industrial wastewater treatment plant treating winery effluent wastewater. Bioresource Technology, v. 132, p. 244–253, 2013.
  27. GUTIÉRREZ-VÉLEZ, V. H.; DEFRIES, R. Annual multi-resolution detection of land cover conversion to oil palm in the Peruvian Amazon. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 129, p. 154–167, 2013.
  28. HALL, S. C.; CAVIGLIA-HARRIS, J. Agricultural development and the industry life cycle on the Brazilian frontier. Environment and Development Economics, v. 18, n. 3, p. 326–353, 2013.
  29. HAME, T. et al. Improved mapping of tropical forests with optical and SAR imagery, part I: forest cover and accuracy assessment using multi-resolution data. IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing, v. 6, n. 1, p. 74–91, 2013.
  30. HARGRAVE, J.; KIS-KATOS, K. Economic Causes of Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon: A Panel Data Analysis for the 2000s. Environmental and Resource Economics, v. 54, n. 4, p. 471–494, 2013.
  31. KARSTENSEN, J.; PETERS, G. P.; ANDREW, R. M. Attribution of CO<inf>2</inf>emissions from Brazilian deforestation to consumers between 1990 and 2010. Environmental Research Letters, v. 8, n. 2, 2013.
  32. KAWAKUBO, F. S.; MORATO, R. G.; LUCHIARI, A. Use of fraction imagery, segmentation and masking techniques to classify land-use and land-cover types in the Brazilian Amazon. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 34, n. 15, p. 5452–5467, 10 ago. 2013.
  33. KORASAKI, V. et al. Conservation value of alternative land-use systems for dung beetles in Amazon: Valuing traditional farming practices. Biodiversity and Conservation, v. 22, n. 6–7, p. 1485–1499, 2013.
  34. KÖRTING, T. S.; GARCIA FONSECA, L. M.; CÂMARA, G. GeoDMA-Geographic Data Mining Analyst. Computers and Geosciences, v. 57, p. 133–145, 2013.
  35. LU, D. et al. Spatiotemporal analysis of land-use and land-cover change in the Brazilian Amazon. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 34, n. 16, p. 5953–5978, 20 ago. 2013.
  36. LUCON, O.; ROMEIRO, V.; PACCA, S. Reflections on the international climate change negotiations: A synthesis of a working group on carbon emission policy and regulation in Brazil. Energy Policy, v. 59, p. 938–941, 2013.
  37. MATRICARDI, E. A. T. et al. Assessment of forest disturbances by selective logging and forest fires in the Brazilian Amazon using Landsat data. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 34, n. 4, p. 1057–1086, 2013.
  38. MEDEIROS, H. et al. Tree mortality, recruitment and growth in a bamboo dominated forest fragment in southwestern Amazonia, Brazil [Mortalidade, recrutamento e crescimento arbóreo em um fragmento florestal dominado por bambu no sudoeste da Amazônia, Brasil]. Biota Neotropica, v. 13, n. 2, p. 29–34, 2013.
  39. MELLO, M. P. et al. Bayesian networks for raster data (BayNeRD): Plausible reasoning from observations. Remote Sensing, v. 5, n. 11, p. 5999–6025, 2013.
  40. MILAZZO, M. F. et al. Sustainable soy biodiesel. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, v. 27, p. 806–852, 2013.
  41. MITCHARD, E. T. A. et al. A novel application of satellite radar data: Measuring carbon sequestration and detecting degradation in a community forestry project in Mozambique. Plant Ecology and Diversity, v. 6, n. 1, p. 159–170, 2013.
  42. MONTEIRO DE CARVALHO, C. Palm oil expansion on degraded land for biodiesel production: a case study in Pará state, Brazil. Biofuels, v. 4, n. 5, p. 485–492, 2013.
  43. MORTON, D. C. et al. Understorey fire frequency and the fate of burned forests in southern Amazonia. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, v. 368, n. 1619, 2013.
  44. MOURA, N. G. et al. Avian biodiversity in multiple-use landscapes of the Brazilian Amazon. Biological Conservation, v. 167, p. 339–348, 2013.
  45. NEPSTAD, D. C. et al. Responding to climate change and the global land crisis: REDD+, market transformation and low-emissions rural development. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, v. 368, n. 1619, 2013.
  46. NOLTE, C. et al. Governance regime and location influence avoided deforestation success of protected areas in the Brazilian Amazon. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, v. 110, n. 13, p. 4956–4961, 2013.
  47. NOLTE, C.; AGRAWAL, A.; BARRETO, P. Setting priorities to avoid deforestation in Amazon protected areas: Are we choosing the right indicators? Environmental Research Letters, v. 8, n. 1, 2013.
  48. OLIVEIRA, R. C. et al. Trap-nests for stingless bees (Hymenoptera, Meliponini). Apidologie, v. 44, n. 1, p. 29–37, 2013.
  49. PIEPRZYK, B.; LAHL, U. Looking back – An analysis of the development of the agricultural production and deforestation worldwide: An article on the current global iLUC-discussion. International Journal of Technology, v. 4, n. 1, p. 1–14, 2013.
  50. PIRES, G. F.; COSTA, M. H. Deforestation causes different subregional effects on the Amazon bioclimatic equilibrium. Geophysical Research Letters, v. 40, n. 14, p. 3618–3623, 2013.
  51. POKORNY, B. et al. From large to small: Reorienting rural development policies in response to climate change, food security and poverty. Forest Policy and Economics, v. 36, p. 52–59, 2013.
  52. POWELL, L. L.; STOUFFER, P. C.; JOHNSON, E. I. Recovery of understory bird movement across the interface of primary and secondary Amazon rainforest. Auk, v. 130, n. 3, p. 459–468, 2013.
  53. REDO, D.; AIDE, T. M.; CLARK, M. L. Vegetation change in Brazil’s dryland ecoregions and the relationship to crop production and environmental factors: Cerrado, Caatinga, and Mato Grosso, 2001-2009. Journal of Land Use Science, v. 8, n. 2, p. 123–153, 2013.
  54. RODRIGUES, A. et al. Land cover map production for Brazilian Amazon using NDVI SPOT VEGETATION time series. Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 39, n. 4, p. 277–289, 2013.
  55. ROSA, I. M. D. et al. Predictive Modelling of Contagious Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon. PLoS ONE, v. 8, n. 10, p. e77231, 18 out. 2013.
  56. SALIMON, C. et al. Seasonal variation in dissolved carbon concentrations and fluxes in the upper Purus River, southwestern Amazon. Biogeochemistry, v. 114, n. 1–3, p. 245–254, 2013.
  57. SCHWARTZMAN, S. et al. The natural and social history of the indigenous lands and protected areas corridor of the Xingu River basin. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, v. 368, n. 1619, 2013.
  58. SENA, E. T.; ARTAXO, P.; CORREIA, A. L. Spatial variability of the direct radiative forcing of biomass burning aerosols and the effects of land use change in Amazonia. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, v. 13, n. 3, p. 1261–1275, 2013.
  59. SIMÃO, G. L.; JACOVINE, L. A. G.; SILVA, E. A. Programa Bolsa Verde do governo federal: contexto e desempenho. Revista de Política Agrícola, v. 22, n. 4, p. 84–94, 2013.
  60. SOARES-FILHO, B.; RODRIGUES, H.; FOLLADOR, M. A hybrid analytical-heuristic method for calibrating land-use change models. Environmental Modelling and Software, v. 43, p. 80–87, 2013.
  61. SOLBERG, S.; ASTRUP, R.; WEYDAHL, D. J. Detection of forest clear-cuts with shuttle radar topography mission (SRTM) and tandem-x inSAR data. Remote Sensing, v. 5, n. 11, p. 5449–5462, 2013.
  62. SOUZA JR., C. M. et al. Ten-year landsat classification of deforestation and forest degradation in the brazilian amazon. Remote Sensing, v. 5, n. 11, p. 5493–5513, 2013.
  63. STICKLER, C. M. et al. Defending public interests in private lands: Compliance, costs and potential environmental consequences of the Brazilian Forest Code in Mato Grosso. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, v. 368, n. 1619, 2013.
  64. TOOMEY, M. et al. Long-term, high-spatial resolution carbon balance monitoring of the Amazonian frontier: Predisturbance and postdisturbance carbon emissions and uptake. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, v. 118, n. 2, p. 400–411, 2013.
  65. VALLE, D.; CLARK, J. Conservation Efforts May Increase Malaria Burden in the Brazilian Amazon. PLoS ONE, v. 8, n. 3, 2013.
  66. VAN VLIET, N. et al. “Slash and Burn” and “Shifting” Cultivation Systems in Forest Agriculture Frontiers from the Brazilian Amazon. Society and Natural Resources, v. 26, n. 12, p. 1454–1467, 2013.
  67. VASCONCELOS, S. S. et al. Variability of vegetation fires with rain and deforestation in Brazil’s state of Amazonas. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 136, p. 199–209, 2013a.
  68. VASCONCELOS, S. S. D. et al. Forest fires in southwestern Brazilian Amazonia: Estimates of area and potential carbon emissions. Forest Ecology and Management, v. 291, p. 199–208, 2013b.
  69. VITEL, C. S. M. N. et al. Land-use Change Modeling in a Brazilian Indigenous Reserve: Construction of a Reference Scenario for the Suruí REDD Project. Human Ecology, v. 41, n. 6, p. 807–826, 2013.
  70. WALKER, N. F.; PATEL, S. A.; KALIF, K. A. B. From Amazon pasture to the high street: Deforestation and the brazilian cattle product supply chain. Tropical Conservation Science, v. 6, n. 3, p. 446–467, 2013.
  71. WHEELER, D. et al. Economic dynamics and forest clearing: A spatial econometric analysis for Indonesia. Ecological Economics, v. 85, p. 85–96, 2013.
  72. XIN, Q. et al. Toward near real-time monitoring of forest disturbance by fusion of MODIS and Landsat data. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 135, p. 234–247, 2013.

2012

Voltar ao topo

  1. AGUIAR, A. P. D. et al. Modeling the spatial and temporal heterogeneity of deforestation-driven carbon emissions: The INPE-EM framework applied to the Brazilian Amazon. Global Change Biology, v. 18, n. 11, p. 3346–3366, 2012.
  2. ALDRICH, S. et al. Contentious Land Change in the Amazon’s Arc of Deforestation. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, v. 102, n. 1, p. 103–128, 2012.
  3. AMARAL, S. et al. Using remote sensing and census tract data to improve representation of population spatial distribution: Case studies in the Brazilian Amazon. Population and Environment, v. 34, n. 1, p. 142–170, 2012.
  4. ARNDT, D. S.; BLUNDEN, J. State of the Climate in 2011. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, v. 93, n. 7, p. S1–S280, 2012.
  5. ARRAES, R. A.; MARIANO, F. Z.; SIMONASSI, A. G. Causas do desmatamento no Brasil e seu ordenamento no contexto mundial. Revista de Economia e Sociologia Rural, v. 50, n. 1, p. 119–140, 2012.
  6. ARVOR, D. et al. Analyzing the agricultural transition in Mato Grosso, Brazil, using satellite-derived indices. Applied Geography, v. 32, n. 2, p. 702–713, 2012.
  7. BARBER, C. P. et al. Dynamic performance assessment of protected areas. Biological Conservation, v. 149, n. 1, p. 6–14, 2012.
  8. BARNI, P. E.; FEARNSIDE, P. M.; GRAÇA, P. M. L. A. Deforestation in the southern portion of the Roraima State: Distribution with respect to INCRA settlement projects and distance from major highways (BR-174 and BR-210) [Desmatamento no sul do Estado de Roraima: Padrões de distribuição em função de projetos de assentamento do INCRA e da distância das principais rodovias (BR-174 e BR-210)]. Acta Amazonica, v. 42, n. 2, p. 195–204, 2012.
  9. BONTEMPS, S. et al. Revisiting land cover observation to address the needs of the climate modeling community. Biogeosciences, v. 9, n. 6, p. 2145–2157, 2012.
  10. BOTELHO, A. L. M. et al. Large and medium-sized mammals of the Humaitá Forest Reserve, southwestern Amazonia, state of Acre, Brazil. Check List, v. 8, n. 6, p. 1190–1195, 2012.
  11. BRONDIZIO, E. S.; MORAN, E. F. Level-dependent deforestation trajectories in the Brazilian Amazon from 1970 to 2001. Population and Environment, v. 34, n. 1, p. 69–85, 2012.
  12. BUSTAMANTE, M. M. C. et al. Estimating greenhouse gas emissions from cattle raising in Brazil. Climatic Change, v. 115, n. 3–4, p. 559–577, 2012.
  13. CELENTANO, D. et al. Welfare outcomes and the advance of the deforestation frontier in the brazilian Amazon. World Development, v. 40, n. 4, p. 850–864, 2012.
  14. CENAMO, M. C.; CARRERO, G. C. Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) in Apuí, Southern Amazonas: Challenges and Caveats Related to Land Tenure and Governance in the Brazilian Amazon. Journal of Sustainable Forestry, v. 31, n. 4–5, p. 445–468, 2012.
  15. CLARK, M. L.; AIDE, T. M.; RINER, G. Land change for all municipalities in Latin America and the Caribbean assessed from 250-m MODIS imagery (2001-2010). Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 126, p. 84–103, 2012.
  16. CORTE, A. P. D. et al. The projects for reducing deforestation emission and forest degradation (REDD) [Os projetos de redução de emissões do desmatamento e da degradação florestal (REDD)]. Floresta, v. 42, n. 1, p. 177–188, 2012.
  17. DAL’ASTA, A. P. et al. Identifying spatial units of human occupation in the Brazilian Amazon using Landsat and CBERS multi-resolution imagery. Remote Sensing, v. 4, n. 1, p. 68–87, 2012.
  18. DAVIDSON, E. A. et al. The Amazon basin in transition. Nature, v. 481, n. 7381, p. 321–328, 2012.
  19. DE ESPINDOLA, G. M. et al. Agricultural land use dynamics in the Brazilian Amazon based on remote sensing and census data. Applied Geography, v. 32, n. 2, p. 240–252, 2012.
  20. DELNATTE, C.; MEYER, J.-Y. Plant introduction, naturalization, and invasion in French Guiana (South America). Biological Invasions, v. 14, n. 5, p. 915–927, 2012.
  21. DOBROVOLSKI, R. Marx’s ecology and the understanding of land cover change. Monthly Review, v. 64, n. 1, p. 31–39, 2012.
  22. DUBREUIL, V.; ARVOR, D.; DEBORTOLI, N. Monitoring the pioneer frontier and agricultural intensification in mato grosso using spot vegetation images. Revue Francaise de Photogrammetrie et de Teledetection, n. 200, p. 2–11, 2012.
  23. ELOY, L. et al. Payments for ecosystem services in Amazonia. The challenge of land use heterogeneity in agricultural frontiers near Cruzeiro do Sul (Acre,Brazil). Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, v. 55, n. 6, p. 685–703, 2012.
  24. EVA, H. D. et al. Forest cover changes in tropical south and Central America from 1990 to 2005 and related carbon emissions and removals. Remote Sensing, v. 4, n. 5, p. 1369–1391, 2012.
  25. FEARNSIDE, P. M. The theoretical battlefield: Accounting for the carbon benefits of maintaining Brazil’s Amazon forest. Carbon Management, v. 3, n. 2, p. 145–148, 2012.
  26. FEARNSIDE, P. M.; LAURANCE, W. F. Infrastructure in Amazonia: Lessons from Brazil’s pluri-annual plans [Infraestrutura na Amazônia: As lições dos planos plurianuais]. Caderno CRH, v. 25, n. 64, p. 87–98, 2012.
  27. FERREIRA, L. V. et al. A vocação da amazônia é florestal e a criação de novos estados pode levar ao aumento do desflorestamento na amazônia brasileira. Estudos Avancados, v. 26, n. 74, p. 187–200, 2012.
  28. FERREIRA, M. J.; GONÇALVES, J. F. C.; FERRAZ, J. B. S. Growth and water use efficiency of young Brazil nut plants on degraded area subjected to fertilization [Crescimento e eficiência do uso da água de plantas jovens de castanheira-da-amazônia em área degradada e submetidas à adubação]. Ciencia Florestal, v. 22, n. 2, p. 393–401, 2012.
  29. FROLKING, S. et al. Detection of large-scale forest canopy change in pan-tropical humid forests 2000-2009 with the seawinds Ku-band scatterometer. IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, v. 50, n. 7 PART1, p. 2603–2617, 2012.
  30. FUNI, C.; PAESE, A. Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Deforestation in Rio Cajarí Extrative Reserve, Amapá, Brazil. PLoS ONE, v. 7, n. 12, 2012.
  31. GLOOR, M. et al. The carbon balance of South America: A review of the status, decadal trends and main determinants. Biogeosciences, v. 9, n. 12, p. 5407–5430, 2012.
  32. GODAR, J. et al. Typology and characterization of Amazon colonists: A case study along the Transamazon highway. Human Ecology, v. 40, n. 2, p. 251–267, 2012.
  33. GODAR, J.; TIZADO, E. J.; POKORNY, B. Who is responsible for deforestation in the Amazon? A spatially explicit analysis along the Transamazon Highway in Brazil. Forest Ecology and Management, v. 267, p. 58–73, 2012.
  34. GUTIERREZ-VELEZ, V. H.; PONTIUS JR., R. G. Influence of carbon mapping and land change modelling on the prediction of carbon emissions from deforestation. Environmental Conservation, v. 39, n. 4, p. 325–336, 2012.
  35. HANSEN, M. C.; LOVELAND, T. R. A review of large area monitoring of land cover change using Landsat data. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 122, p. 66–74, 2012.
  36. HAWES, J. E. et al. Landscape-scale variation in structure and biomass of Amazonian seasonally flooded and unflooded forests. Forest Ecology and Management, v. 281, p. 163–176, 2012.
  37. HECHT, S. B. From eco-catastrophe to zero deforestation? Interdisciplinarities, politics, environmentalisms and reduced clearing in Amazonia. Environmental Conservation, v. 39, n. 1, p. 4–19, 2012.
  38. HILKER, T. et al. Remote sensing of tropical ecosystems: Atmospheric correction and cloud masking matter. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 127, p. 370–384, 2012.
  39. HOCHSTETLER, K.; VIOLA, E. Brazil and the politics of climate change: beyond the global commons. Environmental Politics, v. 21, n. 5, p. 753–771, set. 2012.
  40. HOOGMOED, M. S.; AVILA-PIRES, T. C. S. Inventory of color polymorphism in populations of Dendrobates galactonotus (Anura: Dendrobatidae), a poison frog endemic to Brazil. Phyllomedusa, v. 11, n. 2, p. 95–115, 2012.
  41. HOUGHTON, R. A. et al. Carbon emissions from land use and land-cover change. Biogeosciences, v. 9, n. 12, p. 5125–5142, 2012.
  42. KEHL, T. N. et al. Amazon rainforest deforestation daily detection tool using artificial neural networks and satellite images. Sustainability, v. 4, n. 10, p. 2566–2573, 2012.
  43. LIESENBERG, V.; GLOAGUEN, R. Evaluating SAR polarization modes at L-band for forest classification purposes in eastern Amazon, Brazil. International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation, v. 21, n. 1, p. 122–135, 2012.
  44. LIMA, A. et al. Land use and land cover changes determine the spatial relationship between fire and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon. Applied Geography, v. 34, p. 239–246, 2012.
  45. LOCKWOOD, B. The Influence of Travel Distance on Treatment Noncompletion for Juvenile Offenders. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, v. 49, n. 4, p. 572–600, 2012.
  46. LU, D. et al. Land use/cover classification in the brazilian amazon using satellite images. Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira, v. 47, n. 9, p. 1185–1208, 2012.
  47. MACEDO, M. N. et al. Decoupling of deforestation and soy production in the southern Amazon during the late 2000s. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, v. 109, n. 4, p. 1341–1346, 2012.
  48. MAHOOD, S. P.; LEES, A. C.; PERES, C. A. Amazonian countryside habitats provide limited avian conservation value. Biodiversity and Conservation, v. 21, n. 2, p. 385–405, 2012.
  49. MALINGREAU, J. P.; EVA, H. D.; DE MIRANDA, E. E. Brazilian amazon: A significant five year drop in deforestation rates but figures are on the rise again. Ambio, v. 41, n. 3, p. 309–314, 2012.
  50. MARGONO, B. A. et al. Mapping and monitoring deforestation and forest degradation in Sumatra (Indonesia) using Landsat time series data sets from 1990 to 2010. Environmental Research Letters, v. 7, n. 3, 2012.
  51. MENDES, C. M.; JUNIOR, S. P. Deforestation, economic growth and corruption: a nonparametric analysis on the case of Amazon forest. Applied Economics Letters, v. 19, n. 13, p. 1285–1291, set. 2012.
  52. MENDES-OLIVEIRA, A. C. et al. Edge effects and the impact of wildfires on populations of small non-volant mammals in the forest-savanna transition zone in Southern Amazonia [Efeito de borda e do fogo sobre pequenos mamíferos não-voadores (rodentia e didelphimorphia) em uma zona de transição Floresta-Cerrado ao sul da Amazônia]. Biota Neotropica, v. 12, n. 3, p. 57–63, 2012.
  53. MIYAKE, S. et al. Land-use and environmental pressures resulting from current and future bioenergy crop expansion: A review. Journal of Rural Studies, v. 28, n. 4, p. 650–658, 2012.
  54. NEWTON, P. et al. Consequences of actor level livelihood heterogeneity for additionality in a tropical forest payment for environmental services programme with an undifferentiated reward structure. Global Environmental Change, v. 22, n. 1, p. 127–136, 2012.
  55. PACHECO, P.; POCCARD-CHAPUIS, R. The Complex Evolution of Cattle Ranching Development Amid Market Integration and Policy Shifts in the Brazilian Amazon. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, v. 102, n. 6, p. 1366–1390, 2012.
  56. PARENTE, A. T.; DE SOUZA, E. B.; RIBEIRO, J. B. M. Occurrence of malaria in four cities in the state of Pará during 1988 to 2005 and its relationships with deforestation [A ocorrência de malária em quatro municípios do estado do pará, de 1988 a 2005, e sua relação com o desmatamento]. Acta Amazonica, v. 42, n. 1, p. 41–48, 2012.
  57. PORTILLO-QUINTERO, C. A. et al. Forest cover and deforestation patterns in the Northern Andes (Lake Maracaibo Basin): A synoptic assessment using MODIS and Landsat imagery. Applied Geography, v. 35, n. 1–2, p. 152–163, 2012.
  58. POTAPOV, P. V. et al. Quantifying forest cover loss in Democratic Republic of the Congo, 2000-2010, with Landsat ETM+ data. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 122, p. 106–116, 2012.
  59. PUNHAGUI, K. R. G. et al. Prospects for the use of wood in residential construction in Brazil – First results. Key Engineering Materials, v. 517, p. 247–260, 2012.
  60. RANDERSON, J. T. et al. Global burned area and biomass burning emissions from small fires. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, v. 117, n. 4, 2012.
  61. RICHARDS, P. D. Food, fuel, and the hidden margins of capital. Journal of Land Use Science, v. 7, n. 3, p. 289–310, 2012.
  62. RICHARDS, P. D. et al. Exchange rates, soybean supply response, and deforestation in South America. Global Environmental Change, v. 22, n. 2, p. 454–462, 2012.
  63. ROSA, I. M. D.; SOUZA JR., C.; EWERS, R. M. Changes in Size of Deforested Patches in the Brazilian Amazon. Conservation Biology, v. 26, n. 5, p. 932–937, 2012.
  64. RUDORFF, B. F. T. et al. Remote Sensing Images to Detect Soy Plantations in the Amazon Biome-The Soy Moratorium Initiative. Sustainability, v. 4, n. 5, p. 1074–1088, 2012.
  65. RYAN, C. M. et al. Quantifying small-scale deforestation and forest degradation in African woodlands using radar imagery. Global Change Biology, v. 18, n. 1, p. 243–257, 2012.
  66. SÁNCHEZ-CUERVO, A. M. et al. Land Cover Change in Colombia: Surprising Forest Recovery Trends between 2001 and 2010. PLoS ONE, v. 7, n. 8, 2012.
  67. SANTOS, F. S.; MENDES-OLIVEIRA, A. C. Diversity of medium and large sized mammals in the Urucu basin, Amazonas, Brazil [Diversidade de mamíferos de médio e grande porte da região do rio Urucu, Amazonas, Brasil]. Biota Neotropica, v. 12, n. 3, p. 282–291, 2012.
  68. SCABIN, A. B.; COSTA, F. R. C.; SCHÖNGART, J. The spatial distribution of illegal logging in the Anavilhanas archipelago (Central Amazonia) and logging impacts on species. Environmental Conservation, v. 39, n. 2, p. 111–121, 2012.
  69. SEDJO, R.; MACAULEY, M. Forest Carbon Offsets: Challenges in Measuring, Monitoring and Verifying. Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, v. 54, n. 4, p. 16–23, 29 jun. 2012.
  70. SHELDON, S.; XIAO, X.; BIRADAR, C. Mapping evergreen forests in the Brazilian Amazon using MODIS and PALSAR 500-m mosaic imagery. ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, v. 74, p. 34–40, 2012.
  71. SOLER, L. S. et al. Using fuzzy cognitive maps to describe current system dynamics and develop land cover scenarios: A case study in the Brazilian Amazon. Journal of Land Use Science, v. 7, n. 2, p. 149–175, 2012.
  72. VASCONCELOS, S. S. et al. Aboveground net primary productivity in tropical forest regrowth increases following wetter dry-seasons. Forest Ecology and Management, v. 276, p. 82–87, 2012.
  73. VON RANDOW, R. C. S. et al. Evapotranspiration of deforested areas in central and southwestern Amazonia. Theoretical and Applied Climatology, v. 109, n. 1–2, p. 205–220, 2012.
  74. WEARN, O. R.; REUMAN, D. C.; EWERS, R. M. Extinction debt and windows of conservation opportunity in the Brazilian Amazon. Science, v. 337, n. 6091, p. 228–232, 2012.
  75. WHITTLE, M. et al. Detection of tropical deforestation using ALOS-PALSAR: A Sumatran case study. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 124, p. 83–98, 2012.
  76. WULDER, M. A. et al. Opening the archive: How free data has enabled the science and monitoring promise of Landsat. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 122, p. 2–10, 2012.
  77. YANAI, A. M. et al. Avoided deforestation in Brazilian Amazonia: Simulating the effect of the Juma Sustainable Development Reserve. Forest Ecology and Management, v. 282, p. 78–91, 2012.

2011

Voltar ao topo

  1. ALBRECHT, R. I.; MORALES, C. A.; SILVA DIAS, M. A. F. Electrification of precipitating systems over the Amazon: Physical processes of thunderstorm development. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, v. 116, n. 8, 2011.
  2. ANDERSON, L. O. et al. Fraction images for monitoring intra-annual phenology of different vegetation physiognomies in Amazonia. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 32, n. 2, p. 387–408, 2011.
  3. ANGULO, C. P.; SUÁREZ, I. A.; MOLLICONE, D. Deforestation dynamics in Venezuela: Analysis of changes using historical maps [Dinámica de la deforestación en venezuela: Análisis de los cambios a partir de mapas históricos carlos pacheco ángulo inmaculada aguado suárez]. Interciencia, v. 36, n. 8, p. 578–586, 2011.
  4. ANTONARAKIS, A. S. et al. Using Lidar and Radar measurements to constrain predictions of forest ecosystem structure and function. Ecological Applications, v. 21, n. 4, p. 1120–1137, 2011.
  5. ARAI, E. et al. A multi-resolution multi-temporal technique for detecting and mapping deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest. Remote Sensing, v. 3, n. 9, p. 1943–1956, 2011.
  6. ARIMA, E. Y. et al. Statistical confirmation of indirect land use change in the Brazilian Amazon. Environmental Research Letters, v. 6, n. 2, 2011.
  7. ARVOR, D. et al. Classification of MODIS EVI time series for crop mapping in the state of Mato Grosso, Brazil. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 32, n. 22, p. 7847–7871, 2011.
  8. BALCH, J. K. et al. Size, species, and fire behavior predict tree and liana mortality from experimental burns in the Brazilian Amazon. Forest Ecology and Management, v. 261, n. 1, p. 68–77, 2011.
  9. BARROS, F. B.; PEREIRA, H. M.; VICENTE, L. Amphibia, Anura, Cycloramphidae, proceratophrys concavitympanum Giaretta, Bernarde and Kokubum, 2000: Distribution extension for Brazilian Amazonia and first record in the state of Pará. Check List, v. 7, n. 2, p. 110–111, 2011.
  10. BODART, C. et al. Pre-processing of a sample of multi-scene and multi-date Landsat imagery used to monitor forest cover changes over the tropics. ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, v. 66, n. 5, p. 555–563, 2011.
  11. BRINK, A. B.; EVA, H. D. The potential use of high-resolution Landsat satellite data for detecting land-cover change in the Greater Horn of Africa. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 32, n. 21, p. 5981–5995, 2011.
  12. BROICH, M. et al. Remotely sensed forest cover loss shows high spatial and temporal variation across Sumatera and Kalimantan, Indonesia 2000-2008. Environmental Research Letters, v. 6, n. 1, 2011a.
  13. BROICH, M. et al. Time-series analysis of multi-resolution optical imagery for quantifying forest cover loss in Sumatra and Kalimantan, Indonesia. International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation, v. 13, n. 2, p. 277–291, 2011b.
  14. BURRON, N. Curbing “Anti-Systemic” Tendencies in Peru: Democracy promotion and the US contribution to producing neoliberal hegemony. Third World Quarterly, v. 32, n. 9, p. 1655–1672, 2011.
  15. CAETANO, M. A. L.; GHERARDI, D. F. M.; YONEYAMA, T. An optimized policy for the reduction of CO<inf>2</inf> emission in the Brazilian Legal Amazon. Ecological Modelling, v. 222, n. 15, p. 2835–2840, 2011.
  16. CARRERO, G. C.; FEARNSIDE, P. M. Forest clearing dynamics and the expansion of landholdings in Apuí, a deforestation hotspot on Brazil’s Transamazon Highway. Ecology and Society, v. 16, n. 2, 2011.
  17. CARROLL, M. et al. MODIS vegetative cover conversion and vegetation continuous fields. Remote Sensing and Digital Image Processing, v. 11, p. 725–745, 2011.
  18. CAVIGLIA-HARRIS, J.; HARRIS, D. The impact of settlement design on tropical deforestation rates and resulting land cover patterns. Agricultural and Resource Economics Review, v. 40, n. 3, p. 451–470, 2011.
  19. CHEN, Y. et al. Forecasting fire season severity in South America using sea surface temperature anomalies. Science, v. 334, n. 6057, p. 787–791, 2011.
  20. COLDITZ, R. R. et al. Land cover classification with coarse spatial resolution data to derive continuous and discrete maps for complex regions. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 115, n. 12, p. 3264–3275, 2011.
  21. CONTRERAS-HERMOSILLA, A. People, Governance and Forests—The Stumbling Blocks in Forest Governance Reform in Latin America. Forests, v. 2, n. 1, p. 168–199, 27 jan. 2011.
  22. DE LIMA, I. B.; BUSZYNSKI, L. Local environmental governance, public policies and deforestation in Amazonia. Management of Environmental Quality: An International Journal, v. 22, n. 3, p. 292–316, 2011.
  23. DE OLIVEIRA, R. C. et al. Desmatamento e crescimento econômico no Brasil: Uma análise da curva de Kuznets Ambiental para a Amazônia Legal. Revista de Economia e Sociologia Rural, v. 49, n. 3, p. 709–740, 2011.
  24. DEEGAN, L. A. et al. Amazon deforestation alters small stream structure, nitrogen biogeochemistry and connectivity to larger rivers. Biogeochemistry, v. 105, n. 1, p. 53–74, 2011.
  25. DOBROVOLSKI, R. et al. Agricultural expansion and the fate of global conservation priorities. Biodiversity and Conservation, v. 20, n. 11, p. 2445–2459, 2011a.
  26. DOBROVOLSKI, R. et al. Agricultural expansion can menace Brazilian protected areas during the 21 st century. Natureza e Conservacao, v. 9, n. 2, p. 208–213, 2011b.
  27. DOS SOUSA, E. S. et al. Dissolved carbon in an urban area of a river in the Brazilian Amazon. Biogeochemistry, v. 105, n. 1, p. 159–170, 2011.
  28. GALFORD, G. L. et al. Historical carbon emissions and uptake from the agricultural frontier of the Brazilian Amazon. Ecological Applications, v. 21, n. 3, p. 750–763, 2011.
  29. GAUDER, M.; GRAEFF-HÖNNINGER, S.; CLAUPEIN, W. The impact of a growing bioethanol industry on food production in Brazil. Applied Energy, v. 88, n. 3, p. 672–679, 2011.
  30. GONÇALVES, F. G.; SANTOS, J. R.; TREUHAFT, R. N. Stem volume of tropical forests from polarimetric radar. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 32, n. 2, p. 503–522, 2011.
  31. HAYES, N.; RAJÃO, R. Competing institutional logics and sustainable development: the case of geographic information systems in Brazil’s Amazon region. Information Technology for Development, v. 17, n. 1, p. 4–23, jan. 2011.
  32. IZENMAN, A. J. et al. Local spatial biclustering and prediction of urban juvenile delinquency and recidivism. Statistical Analysis and Data Mining, v. 4, n. 3, p. 259–275, 2011.
  33. LANGE, M. et al. The impact of forest management on litter-dwelling invertebrates: A subtropical-temperate contrast. Biodiversity and Conservation, v. 20, n. 10, p. 2133–2147, 2011.
  34. LAPOLA, D. M. et al. Impacts of climate change and the end of deforestation on land use in the Brazilian Legal Amazon. Earth Interactions, v. 15, n. 16, p. 1–29, 2011.
  35. LEONETI, A. B.; DO PRADO, E. L.; DE OLIVEIRA, S. V. W. B. Basic sanitation sector in Brazil: Overview about investments and sustainability for the 21<inf>st</inf>century [Saneamento básico no Brasil: Considerações sobre investimentos e sustentabilidade para o século XXI]. Revista de Administracao Publica, v. 45, n. 2, p. 331–348, 2011.
  36. LOARIE, S. R. et al. Land-Cover and surface water change drive large albedo increases in south america. Earth Interactions, v. 15, n. 7, p. 1–16, 2011.
  37. LU, D. et al. Fractional forest cover mapping in the brazilian amazon with a combination of modis and tm images. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 32, n. 22, p. 7131–7149, 2011.
  38. MAEDA, E. E. et al. Fire risk assessment in the Brazilian Amazon using MODIS imagery and change vector analysis. Applied Geography, v. 31, n. 1, p. 76–84, 2011a.
  39. MAEDA, E. E. et al. Dynamic modeling of forest conversion: Simulation of past and future scenarios of rural activities expansion in the fringes of the Xingu National Park, Brazilian Amazon. International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation, v. 13, n. 3, p. 435–446, 2011b.
  40. MARKEWITZ, D. et al. Discharge-calcium concentration relationships in streams of the Amazon and Cerrado of Brazil: Soil or land use controlled. Biogeochemistry, v. 105, n. 1, p. 19–35, 2011.
  41. MARTORANO, L. G. et al. Top-bioclimate conditions associated with the natural occurrence of two Amazonian tree species for sustainable reforestation in the State of Para, Brazil. WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment, v. 144, p. 111–122, 2011.
  42. MILLER, S. D. et al. Reduced impact logging minimally alters tropical rainforest carbon and energy exchange. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, v. 108, n. 48, p. 19431–19435, 2011.
  43. MORTON, D. C. et al. Mapping canopy damage from understory fires in Amazon forests using annual time series of Landsat and MODIS data. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 115, n. 7, p. 1706–1720, 2011a.
  44. MORTON, D. C. et al. Historic emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in Mato Grosso, Brazil: 1) source data uncertainties. Carbon Balance and Management, v. 6, 2011b.
  45. MOUTINHO, P. et al. The emerging REDD+ regime of Brazil. Carbon Management, v. 2, n. 5, p. 587–602, 2011.
  46. NUMATA, I. et al. Carbon emissions from deforestation and forest fragmentation in the Brazilian Amazon. Environmental Research Letters, v. 6, n. 4, 2011.
  47. NUMATA, I.; COCHRANE, M. A.; GALVËO, L. S. Analyzing the impacts of frequency and severity of forest fire on the recovery of disturbed forest using landsat time series and EO-1 hyperion in the Southern Brazilian Amazon. Earth Interactions, v. 15, n. 13, p. 1–17, 2011.
  48. OMETTO, J. P.; AGUIAR, A. P. D.; MARTINELLI, L. A. Amazon deforestation in Brazil: effects, drivers and challenges. Carbon Management, v. 2, n. 5, p. 575–585, out. 2011.
  49. OSZWALD, J. et al. Identification of land-use indicators to assess changes in landscape mosaics [Identification d’indicateurs de changement d’occupation du sol pour le suivi des mosaïques paysagères]. Bois et Forets des Tropiques, v. 65, n. 307, p. 7–21, 2011.
  50. POCCARD-CHAPUIS, R. et al. Farming, the industry and territory in the tropics [Élevage, filières et territoires en régions chaudes]. Productions Animales, v. 24, n. 1, p. 129–144, 2011.
  51. RAŠI, R. et al. An automated approach for segmenting and classifying a large sample of multi-date Landsat imagery for pan-tropical forest monitoring. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 115, n. 12, p. 3659–3669, 2011.
  52. REDO, D. J.; MILLINGTON, A. C. A hybrid approach to mapping land-use modification and land-cover transition from MODIS time-series data: A case study from the Bolivian seasonal tropics. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 115, n. 2, p. 353–372, 2011.
  53. RODRIGUES, E. P.; PINHEIRO, E. DA S. O desflorestamento ao longo da rodovia BR-174 (Manaus/AM – Boa Vista/RR). Sociedade & Natureza, v. 23, n. 3, p. 513–528, dez. 2011.
  54. RUDORFF, B. F. T. et al. The soy moratorium in the Amazon biome monitored by remote sensing images. Remote Sensing, v. 3, n. 1, p. 185–202, 2011.
  55. SAITO, É. A. et al. Efeitos da mudança de escala em padrões de desmatamento na Amazônia. Revista Brasileira de Cartografia, n. 63/3, set 2011.
  56. SALIMON, C. I. et al. Estimating state-wide biomass carbon stocks for a REDD plan in Acre, Brazil. Forest Ecology and Management, v. 262, n. 3, p. 555–560, 2011.
  57. SCHEFFLER, R. et al. Soil hydraulic response to land-use change associated with the recent soybean expansion at the Amazon agricultural frontier. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, v. 144, n. 1, p. 281–289, 2011.
  58. SILVESTRINI, R. A. et al. Simulating fire regimes in the Amazon in response to climate change and deforestation. Ecological Applications, v. 21, n. 5, p. 1573–1590, 2011.
  59. SOARES NETO, T. G. et al. Laboratory evaluation of Amazon forest biomass burning emissions. Atmospheric Environment, v. 45, n. 39, p. 7455–7461, 2011.
  60. SOUSA, R. et al. Policies and regulations for Brazil’s artisanal gold mining sector: Analysis and recommendations. Journal of Cleaner Production, v. 19, n. 6–7, p. 742–750, 2011.
  61. STEHMAN, S. V. et al. Adapting a global stratified random sample for regional estimation of forest cover change derived from satellite imagery. Remote Sensing of Environment, v. 115, n. 2, p. 650–658, 2011.
  62. VAN LEEUWEN, T. T. et al. Optimal use of land surface temperature data to detect changes in tropical forest cover. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, v. 116, n. 2, 2011.
  63. YIN, S.-P. et al. Classification of dry cropland in Heilongjiang Province based on decision tree. Journal of Natural Disasters, v. 20, n. 1, p. 92–96, 2011.
  64. YOSHIKAWA, S.; SANGA-NGOIE, K. Deforestation dynamics in Mato Grosso in the southern Brazilian Amazon using GIS and NOAA/AVHRR data. International Journal of Remote Sensing, v. 32, n. 2, p. 523–544, 2011.

Voltar para o topo

Copyright (©) 2025 • Portal de Dados Geoespaciais do INPE - (v.1.0) • Av. dos Astronautas, 1.758 • São José dos Campos • SP