2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-009-9756-6
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Biomass burning, humans and climate change in Southeast Asia

Abstract: Biomass burning is an integral part of the Earth system, influencing and being influenced by global climate conditions, vegetation cover and human activity. Fire has long been associated with certain vegetation types and land uses in Southeast Asia, but has increasingly affected forests in Indonesia over the last 50 years or so, and peat swamp forests in particular during the last two to three decades. The role of humans, as igniters of fires and as contributors to the conditions that enable fires once ignited… Show more

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Cited by 71 publications
(47 citation statements)
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References 119 publications
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“…Parnell et al (2003) provide an excellent quantification of the effects of collecting patterns on our knowledge of Thai plants. The probable extent of our ignorance is indicated by the description of hundreds of new species of vertebrates and plants in both Vietnam and central Borneo since 1992 (Sterling et al 2006;World Wildlife Fund 2009). Similar surprises can be expected in Myanmar where the northern limits of the Sundaic biota cannot be considered known until the Tenasserim is surveyed.…”
Section: Documenting Biogeographic Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parnell et al (2003) provide an excellent quantification of the effects of collecting patterns on our knowledge of Thai plants. The probable extent of our ignorance is indicated by the description of hundreds of new species of vertebrates and plants in both Vietnam and central Borneo since 1992 (Sterling et al 2006;World Wildlife Fund 2009). Similar surprises can be expected in Myanmar where the northern limits of the Sundaic biota cannot be considered known until the Tenasserim is surveyed.…”
Section: Documenting Biogeographic Patternsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This region has a tropical monsoon climate. There are three distinct seasons in Mainland Southeast Asia, i.e., the hot season from March to April, the cool and dry season from November to February and the rainy season from May to October [22]. During the dry season, natural landscape types are diverse and the differences among various landscapes are very evident.…”
Section: Ground Reference Data and Testing Sitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This region has a tropical monsoon climate. It encompasses three distinct seasons, i.e., the hot season (March-April), rainy season (May-October), and cool and dry season (November-February) [125]. During the dry season (November-April), the light cloudy weather makes the acquisitions of cloud-free imagery possible for time-series analysis.…”
Section: Phenological Features Based Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%