Igor Lysenko
World Conservation Monitoring Centre
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Biodiversity and Conservation | 2003
N. Bystriakova; V. Kapos; Igor Lysenko; C.M.A. Stapleton
Although Asian bamboo species constitute a non-timber forest product of major cultural and economic importance, no detailed regional assessment of their distribution patterns has previously been made. To assess the potential of the existing bamboo species distribution data for production of regional mapping tools for planning the conservation of forest-based biodiversity, data on bamboo distribution and forest cover were combined. Over 1000 bamboo species from 60 genera of woody bamboos were incorporated, allowing the mapping of individual species or groups of species and genera, along with potential species richness and biodiversity hotspots. Over 6.3 million km2 of Asian forest potentially contains bamboo, with highest densities indicated from northeastern India through Burma to southern China, and through Sumatra to Borneo. The highest figures for potential species richness (144 spp per square km) were recorded in forests of south China, including Hainan Island. Despite substantial inadequacies and inconsistencies in knowledge of the taxonomy and distribution of bamboo species, this approach may provide a valuable tool for planning in situ conservation of forest biodiversity.
Oryx | 2010
Jörn P. W. Scharlemann; Valerie Kapos; Alison Campbell; Igor Lysenko; Neil D. Burgess; Matthew C. Hansen; Holly K. Gibbs; Barney Dickson; Lera Miles
Forest loss and degradation in the tropics contribute 6-17% of all greenhouse gas emissions. Protected areas cover 217.2 million ha (19.6%) of the worlds humid tropical forests and contain c. 70.3 petagrams of carbon (Pg C) in biomass and soil to 1 m depth. Between 2000 and 2005, we estimate that 1.75 million ha of forest were lost from protected areas in humid tropical forests, causing the emission of 0.25-0.33 Pg C. Protected areas lost about half as much carbon as the same area of unprotected forest. We estimate that the reduction of these carbon emissions from ongoing deforestation in protected sites in humid tropical forests could be valued at USD 6,200-7,400 million depending on the land use after clearance. This is >1.5 times the estimated spending on protected area management in these regions. Improving management of protected areas to retain forest cover better may be an important, although certainly not sufficient, component of an overall strategy for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD)
Biological Conservation | 2009
Christine B. Schmitt; Neil D. Burgess; Lauren Coad; Alexander Belokurov; Charles Besançon; Lauriane Boisrobert; Alison Campbell; Lucy Fish; Derek Gliddon; Kate Humphries; Valerie Kapos; Colby Loucks; Igor Lysenko; Lera Miles; Craig M. Mills; Susan Minnemeyer; Till Pistorius; Corinna Ravilious; Marc K. Steininger; Georg Winkel
Archive | 2008
Alison Campbell; Igor Lysenko; Lera Miles
Archive | 2004
Nadia Bystriakova; Valerie Kapos; Igor Lysenko
Archive | 2003
Nadia Bystriakova; Valerie Kapos; Chris Stapleton; Igor Lysenko
Archive | 2002
Simon Blyth; Brian Groombridge; Igor Lysenko; Lera Miles; Adrian C. Newton
Archive | 2008
Alison Campbell; Valerie Kapos; Igor Lysenko
Archive | 2002
Valerie Kapos; Igor Lysenko; Rob Lesslie
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science | 2009
Alison Campbell; Barney Dickson; Holly K. Gibbs; Matthew C. Hansen; Valerie Kapos; Igor Lysenko; Lera Miles; Jörn P. W. Scharlemann