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Home › Topics › Biodiversity › Page 5

Biodiversity

  • Local communities: land conservation’s forgotten guardians

    Monday July 27th, 2015
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    Originally posted on CIFOR’s Forests News. By Douglas Sheil, Manuel Boissiere and Guillaume Beaudoin. Late last year, there was publicity about the plight of the San (bushmen) of the Kalahari in Botswana – part of a growing number of ‘conservation refugees’ from across the world who have been forcibly evicted from large areas of land […]

  • Carbon or biodiversity conservation? You can’t have the best of both worlds

    Friday July 03rd, 2015
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    Originally posted on CIFOR’s Forests News. By Thomas Hubert. When trying to protect carbon stocks and biodiversity, the expression “to kill two birds with one stone” seems hardly appropriate. And indeed, it seems that the REDD+ stone isn’t hitting the dual targets of storing carbon and protecting wildlife, according to recent research from Indonesia. The new […]

  • Human-orangutan conflict in Borneo: where, when, why?

    Tuesday June 30th, 2015
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    Originally posted on CIFOR’s Forests News. By Jack Hewson. BOGOR, Indonesia—A 90 kilogram full-grown male orangutan is sitting in your garden, eating mangoes stolen from your mango tree. You are unhappy about this. So how do you get rid of him? According to conservation scientist Erik Meijaard, the best method is to find some friends, […]

  • Brochure: Forests, Trees and Agroforestry – Livelihoods, Landscapes and Governance

    Tuesday May 26th, 2015
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    With over 230 researchers working in more than 80 countries across Asia, Africa and Latin America, the CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry (FTA) responds to the urgent need for a strong and sustained research focus on the management of forests and trees. Trees on farms and in forests play a crucial role in confronting some of the […]

  • In the battle for biodiversity, look to landscapes

    Friday May 22nd, 2015
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    Originally posted on CIFOR’s Forests News blog The forests of Riau were rich with sound when Andjar Rafiastanto first visited the central Sumatran province in 1998. The calls of black-furred gibbons echoed through the trees, along with the chatter of hornbills, Sumatran peacock pheasants and dozens of other bird species. But the widespread establishment of oil […]

  • Slash and burn main threat for DRC forests – or is it?

    Friday May 08th, 2015
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    Originally posted on CIFOR’s Forests News blog By Thomas Hubert The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is home to the second-largest single block of forest in the world, and its forests make up two-thirds of the Congo Basin forest area. Researchers have often concluded that slash-and-burn agriculture and biomass production are two of the most […]

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Building on the success of the Forest Days and Agricultural and Rural Development Days, the inaugural Global Landscapes Forum took place on the sidelines of the UNFCCC COP19 in Warsaw. In 2014, the second Global Landscapes Forum brought together 1,700 stakeholders in Lima, alongside UNFCCC COP20. The third Global Landscapes Forum in Paris during UNFCCC COP21 was attended by more than 3,000 participants.

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PAST EVENTS

Building on the success of the Forest Days and Agricultural and Rural Development Days, the inaugural Global Landscapes Forum took place on the sidelines of the UNFCCC COP19 in Warsaw. In 2014, the second Global Landscapes Forum brought together 1,700 stakeholders in Lima, alongside UNFCCC COP20. The third Global Landscapes Forum in Paris during UNFCCC COP21 was attended by more than 3,000 participants.

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