1. Identity statement | |
Reference Type | Conference Paper (Conference Proceedings) |
Site | plutao.sid.inpe.br |
Holder Code | isadg {BR SPINPE} ibi 8JMKD3MGPCW/3DT298S |
Identifier | 8JMKD3MGP3W/3RAQSQ8 |
Repository | sid.inpe.br/plutao/2018/06.19.04.40 |
Metadata Repository | sid.inpe.br/plutao/2018/06.19.04.40.14 |
Metadata Last Update | 2019:01.18.04.55.51 (UTC) administrator |
Label | lattes: 1913003589198061 1 Shimabukuro:2018:MoSyUs |
Citation Key | Shimabukuro:2018:MoSyUs |
Title | Brazilian Amazon forest from space: monitoring systems using satellite images |
Format | DVD |
Year | 2018 |
Access Date | 2024, May 18 |
Secondary Type | PRE CI |
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2. Context | |
Author | Shimabukuro, Yosio Edemir |
Resume Identifier | 8JMKD3MGP5W/3C9JJCQ |
Group | DIDSR-CGOBT-INPE-MCTIC-GOV-BR |
Affiliation | Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE) |
Author e-Mail Address | yosio.shimabukuro@inpe.br |
Conference Name | International Conference on Remote Sensing Technologies and Applications (ICRSTA), 3 |
Conference Location | Bangkok, Tailandia |
Date | 5-7 jan. |
Book Title | Proceedings |
History (UTC) | 2018-06-19 04:40:14 :: lattes -> administrator :: 2018-06-19 11:34:31 :: administrator -> lattes :: 2018 2018-06-19 14:31:05 :: lattes -> administrator :: 2018 2019-01-18 04:55:51 :: administrator -> simone :: 2018 |
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3. Content and structure | |
Is the master or a copy? | is the master |
Content Stage | completed |
Transferable | 1 |
Content Type | External Contribution |
Abstract | Amazonia is the greatest rain forest biome in our Planet, and the place where we can find the largest continuous extension of tropical forests still existing. In Brazilian Amazon, an accelerated process of anthropization of extense mass of forest began by the end of the 1960 decade, due to governmental policies intending to integrate the vast Amazonian territory in the country with roads, human settlements, and the resultant expansion of frontiers for agriculture and cattle farming. The Brazilian government has historically organized its policies for surveillance and control of the Brazilian Amazon forest through the use of space technology tools. In operational terms, it has been made possible because historical data provided by Landsat-series satellites through a methodological development in the extraction of information from images taken by sensors (MSS, TM, ETM+, OLI/Landsat) to map and monitor activities that convert forest typology into areas of agriculture and/or cattle farming. In face of constant international pressure, the PRODES Brazilian deforestation monitoring project (http://www.dpi.inpe.br/prodesdigital/) has been set up inside INPE (Brazilian National Institute for Space Research). However, PRODES information is obtained using low temporal resolution images from Landsat (16 days), and very often the government and environment-control agencies need to have an efficient and operational procedure, as close as possible to a real-time follow up, to monitor the rapid dynamics of deforestation activities. Thus, since data from MODIS/Terra and MODIS/Aqua sensors became available, with a temporal resolution of about two days for the Amazonian region, these products have been providing for a very big potential of application in near-real-time monitoring of deforested areas. In this way, a new methodology has been developed through a project called DETER (Real-Time Detection of Deforestation, http://www.obt.inpe.br/deter/indexdeter). This work presents an overview of the spatial distribution of deforestation and its dynamics in the Brazilian Amazonia, taking from a regular program of annual (Analogic PRODES and Digital PRODES) and monthly (DETER) monitoring of that immense territory through remote sensing. Information given about rates (since 1988) and spatial distribution (since 2000) of this forest conversion has been useful to characterize the magnitude and the directions of change, giving subsidies to those who make decision and helping them to direct public policies and make an adequate environmental governance of this key region of our Planet, most especially in areas considered to be hot spots, where anthropic pressure is greater. |
Area | SRE |
Arrangement | urlib.net > BDMCI > Fonds > Produção anterior à 2021 > DIDSR > Brazilian Amazon forest... |
doc Directory Content | there are no files |
source Directory Content | there are no files |
agreement Directory Content | there are no files |
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4. Conditions of access and use | |
Language | en |
User Group | lattes |
Reader Group | administrator lattes |
Visibility | shown |
Update Permission | not transferred |
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5. Allied materials | |
Next Higher Units | 8JMKD3MGPCW/3ER446E |
Host Collection | dpi.inpe.br/plutao@80/2008/08.19.15.01 |
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6. Notes | |
Empty Fields | archivingpolicy archivist callnumber copyholder copyright creatorhistory descriptionlevel dissemination doi e-mailaddress edition editor isbn issn keywords lineage mark mirrorrepository nextedition notes numberoffiles numberofvolumes orcid organization pages parameterlist parentrepositories previousedition previouslowerunit progress project publisher publisheraddress readpermission rightsholder schedulinginformation secondarydate secondarykey secondarymark serieseditor session shorttitle size sponsor subject targetfile tertiarymark tertiarytype type url versiontype volume |
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7. Description control | |
e-Mail (login) | simone |
update | |
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