Johan Oszwald
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Johan Oszwald.
Journal of Arachnology | 2011
Nancy F. Lo-Man-Hung; Raphaël Marichal; David F. Candiani; Leonardo S. Carvalho; Rafael P. Indicatti; Alexandre B. Bonaldo; Darío H. R. Cobo; Alexander Feijoo; Stéphanie Tselouiko; Catarina Praxedes; George G. Brown; Elena Velasquez; Thibaud Decaëns; Johan Oszwald; Marlucia Martins; Patrick Lavelle
Abstract The global demand for different land-use practice commodities in the Amazonia is growing, and this region is increasingly affected by the impacts of land management. The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of land-use intensification on soil spider assemblages from six different land-use systems in Colombia and Brazil. The systems were fallows after crops and pastures, forest, crops, pastures and plantations. Spider species richness and density decreased with increasing farming management intensity. A principal component analysis (PCA) showed forests and fallows were separated from systems with stronger anthropogenic soil disturbance. The relationships of ten spider guilds differed significantly between land-uses, suggesting that they can be a reliable parameter for studies of ecological indicators.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Ameline Vallet; Bruno Locatelli; Harold Levrel; Christian Brenes Pérez; Pablo Imbach; Natalia Estrada Carmona; Raphaël Manlay; Johan Oszwald
The forest transition framework describes the temporal changes of forest areas with economic development. A first phase of forest contraction is followed by a second phase of expansion once a turning point is reached. This framework does not differentiate forest types or ecosystem services, and describes forests regardless of their contribution to human well-being. For several decades, deforestation in many tropical regions has degraded ecosystem services, such as watershed regulation, while increasing provisioning services from agriculture, for example, food. Forest transitions and expansion have been observed in some countries, but their consequences for ecosystem services are often unclear. We analyzed the implications of forest cover change on ecosystem services in Costa Rica, where a forest transition has been suggested. A review of literature and secondary data on forest and ecosystem services in Costa Rica indicated that forest transition might have led to an ecosystem services transition. We modeled and mapped the changes of selected ecosystem services in the upper part of the Reventazón watershed and analyzed how supply changed over time in order to identify possible transitions in ecosystem services. The modeled changes of ecosystem services is similar to the second phase of a forest transition but no turning point was identified, probably because of the limited temporal scope of the analysis. Trends of provisioning and regulating services and their tradeoffs were opposite in different spatial subunits of our study area, which highlights the importance of scale in the analysis of ecosystem services and forest transitions. The ecosystem services transition framework proposed in this study is useful for analyzing the temporal changes of ecosystem services and linking socio-economic drivers to ecosystem services demand at different scales.
The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Physical Geography | 2018
Simon Dufour; Xavier Arnauld de Sartre; Monica Castro; Michel Grimaldi; Solen Le Clec’h; Johan Oszwald
Critical Physical Geography has two fundamental ambitions: to link deeply biophysical processes and social relationships and to increase reflexivity in scientific practice. Thus, it provides a powerful framework to analyze how general concepts such as ecosystem services are used in natural science and environmental management. Over the last decade, this concept has become a crucial component for justifying and implementing environmental policies. In this chapter, we aim to demonstrate the relevance of a Critical Physical Geography for improving identification of potentials and limitations of the concept of ecosystem services. We demonstrate that a thorough understanding of the biophysical processes that generate services and indicator choices has a strong influence on the ability to quantify and to map them.
International Journal of Geographical Information Science | 2018
Solen Le Clec'h; Sean Sloan; Valéry Gond; Guillaume Cornu; Thibaud Decaëns; Simon Dufour; Michel Grimaldi; Johan Oszwald
ABSTRACT Mapping ecosystem services (ES) over large scales is important for environmental monitoring but is often prohibitively expensive and difficult. We test a hybrid, low-cost method of mapping ES indicators over large scales in Pará State, Brazil. Four ES indicators (vegetation carbon stocks, biodiversity index, soil chemical quality index and rates of water infiltration into soil) were measured in the field and then summarized spatially for regional land-cover classes derived from satellite imagery. The regionally mapped ES values correlated strongly with independent and local measures of ES. For example, regional estimates of the vegetation carbon stocks are strongly correlated with actual measures derived from field samples and validation data (significant anova test – p-value = 4.51e−9) and differed on average by only 20 Mg/ha from the field data. Our spatially-nested approach provides reliable and accurate maps of ES at both local and regional scales. Local maps account for the specificities of an area while regional maps provide an accurate generalization of an ES’ state. Such up-scaling methods infuse large-scale ES maps with localized data and enable the estimation of uncertainty of at regional scales. Our approach is first step towards the spatial characterization of ES at large and potentially global scales.
Applied Soil Ecology | 2010
Raphaël Marichal; Alex Feijoo Martinez; Catarina Praxedes; Darío H. Ruiz; Andres F. Carvajal; Johan Oszwald; María del Pilar Hurtado; George G. Brown; Michael Grimaldi; Thierry Desjardins; Max Sarrazin; Thibaud Decaëns; Elena Velasquez; Patrick Lavelle
Landscape Ecology | 2014
Michel Grimaldi; Johan Oszwald; Sylvain Dolédec; María del Pilar Hurtado; Izildinha Souza Miranda; Xavier Arnauld de Sartre; William Santos de Assis; Er Castañeda; Thierry Desjardins; Florence Dubs; Edward Guevara; Valéry Gond; Tâmara Thaiz Santana Lima; Raphaël Marichal; Fernando Michelotti; Danielle Mitja; Norberto Noronha; Mariana Nascimento Delgado Oliveira; Bertha L Ramírez; Gamaliel Rodriguez; Max Sarrazin; Mário Lopes da Silva; Luiz Gonzaga Silva Costa; Simão Lindoso de Souza; Iran Veiga; Elena Velasquez; Patrick Lavelle
Science et changements planétaires / Sécheresse | 2005
Sylvain Bigot; Télésphore Yao Brou; Johan Oszwald; Arona Diedhiou
Ecological Indicators | 2016
Solen Le Clec’h; Johan Oszwald; Thibaud Decaëns; Thierry Desjardins; Simon Dufour; Michel Grimaldi; Nicolas Jégou; Patrick Lavelle
Applied Soil Ecology | 2014
Raphaël Marichal; Michel Grimaldi; M Alexander Feijoo; Johan Oszwald; Catarina Praxedes; Darío H. R. Cobo; María del Pilar Hurtado; Thierry Desjardins; Mário Lopes da Silva Júnior; Luiz Gonzaga Silva Costa; Izildinha Souza Miranda; Mariana Nascimento Delgado Oliveira; George G. Brown; Stéphanie Tsélouiko; Marlucia Martins; Thibaud Decaëns; Elena Velasquez; Patrick Lavelle
Bois Et Forets Des Tropiques | 2011
Johan Oszwald; Valéry Gond; Sylvain Dolédec; Patrick Lavelle
Collaboration
Dive into the Johan Oszwald's collaboration.
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputs