Impactos del uso del suelo sobre la respuesta hidrológica de cuencas andinas
By Boris F. Ochoa-Tocachi, Wouter Buytaert, Bert De Bièvre, Rolando Célleri, Patricio Crespo, Marcos Villacís, Carlos A. Llerena, Luis Acosta, Mauricio Villazón, Mario Guallpa, Junior Gil-Ríos, Paola Fuentes, Dimas Olaya, Paúl Viñas, Gerver Rojas y Sandro AriasEste estudio analiza datos generados a partir de una red de monitoreo participativo de veinticinco cuencas hidrográficas que cubren tres de los biomas andinos principales (páramo, jalca y puna) y vinculan sus respuestas hidrológicas a los principales tipos de intervenciones humanas (cultivo, forestación y pastoreo). Se implementó el método de cuencas pares para evaluar los[…]
Dependent Documents
Resumen de investigación – Impactos del uso del suelo sobre la respuesta hidrológica de cuencas andinas
By Boris F. Ochoa-Tocachi, Dimas Olaya, Javier Antiporta, y Bert De BièvreRosewood Species Classified as Hongmu under China’s Revised (2017) Standard
The term “rosewood” is used to designate several hundred species of tropical timber, found across West and Central Africa, Southeast Asia, and Latin America. 29 species are officially designated as hongmu (红木) under China’s National Hongmu Standard (2017). The Standard can be legally enforced in relation to product marketing claims, and has played a key[…]
Email Signup
Subscribe to any of Forest Trends’ mailing lists to keep up with the news, publications, and events that interest you.
Having Trouble?
If you experience any technical difficulties on our site, please contact Genevieve Bennett, Communications Manager.
A Gigaton REDD+ Bid Strategy
Unlocking the potential for REDD+ in supporting the protection of rainforests and other “natural climate solutions” in tropical forest countries
By Rupert EdwardsA massive increase in public and private results-based funding commitments is critical to protect tropical rainforests and other “natural climate solutions” in tropical forest countries, and thus to hopes of holding global warming below 2°C. REDD+ programs, that avoid and reverse the loss of tropical forests, can contribute trillions of dollars in value by “flattening[…]
The Living Pharmacy Project
By Cheyenne Coxon and Genevieve BennettForest Trends has been working with Yawanawa and Suruí indigenous communities since 2014 to establish “Living Pharmacies.” By building medicinal plant gardens in their villages, communities can reclaim and maintain a resource critical to their health and cultural identity. Each Living Pharmacy is a place where elders can pass their traditions on to the next[…]
COVID-19 Prevention Leaflet (Portuguese)
Dependent Documents
Community Benefits Sharing in the Forestry Sector: Liberia’s Legislative Framework & Track Record on Sharing Land Rental Fees from Commercial Forestry 2007-2019
Liberia’s legislative framework explicitly requires that communities impacted by logging should also share in the benefits of the commercial activity. This briefing summarizes the legal requirements on benefits sharing and then analyzes Liberia’s track record implementing this framework since resumption of logging after the country’s civil war. The forthcoming National Forest Forum and subsequent efforts[…]
“Conflict Rubber” and Land Rights in Southeastern Myanmar
By Kevin Woods, Naomi Basik Treanor, and Mike DwyerIn the northern Tanintharyi (Tenasserim) Region of southeastern Myanmar, after decades of war, rubber expansion is aggravating tenure insecurity and ethnic political conflict, ultimately undermining peacebuilding and security. Since the main Mon and Karen (Kayin) rebel groups signed ceasefires with the Myanmar military in 2012, rubber production has expanded southward from its epicenter in Mon[…]
Rubber Plantation Value Chains in Laos: Opportunities and Constraints in Policy, Legality and Wood Processing
By Hilary Smith, Juliet Lu, Phuc Xuan To, Soytavanh Mienmany, Khonethong SoukphaxayStudies on rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR, Laos) have largely focussed on land allocation and relations between the Lao State, investors, and Lao rubber farmers. The history and international context, and some environmental and social impacts have been investigated to a lesser extent, and there are no comprehensive studies[…]