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Featured researches published by Rob Braswell.


Ecological Applications | 2004

Ecological research in the Large Scale Biosphere Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia: A discussion of early results

Michael Keller; Ane Alencar; Gregory P. Asner; Rob Braswell; Mercedes Bustmante; Eric A. Davidson; Ted R. Feldpausch; Erick Fernandes; Michael L. Goulden; Paval Kabat; Bart Kruijt; Flávio J. Luizão; Scott N. Miller; Daniel Markewitz; Antonio Donato Nobre; Carlos A. Nobre; Nicolau Priante Filho; Humberto R. da Rocha; Pedro L. Silva Dias; Celso von Randow; George L. Vourlitis

The Large-scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia (LBA) is a multinational, interdisciplinary research program led by Brazil. Ecological studies in LBA focus on how tropical forest conversion, regrowth, and selective logging influence carbon storage, nutrient dynamics, trace gas fluxes, and the prospect for sustainable land use in the Amazon region. Early results from ecological studies within LBA emphasize the var- iability within the vast Amazon region and the profound effects that land-use and land- cover changes are having on that landscape. The predominant land cover of the Amazon region is evergreen forest; nonetheless, LBA studies have observed strong seasonal patterns in gross primary production, ecosystem respiration, and net ecosystem exchange, as well as phenology and tree growth. The seasonal patterns vary spatially and interannually and evidence suggests that these patterns are driven not only by variations in weather but also by innate biological rhythms of the forest species. Rapid rates of deforestation have marked the forests of the Amazon region over the past three decades. Evidence from ground-based surveys and remote sensing show that substantial areas of forest are being degraded by logging activities and through the collapse of forest edges. Because forest edges and logged forests are susceptible to fire, positive feedback cycles of forest degradation may be initiated by land-use-change events. LBA studies indicate that cleared lands in the Amazon, once released from cultivation or pasture usage, regenerate biomass rapidly. However, the pace of biomass accumulation is dependent upon past land use and the depletion of nutrients by unsustainable land-management practices. The challenge for ongoing research within LBA is to integrate the recognition of diverse patterns and processes into general models for prediction of regional ecosystem function.


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2003

IKONOS imagery for the Large Scale Biosphere–Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia (LBA)

George C. Hurtt; Xiangming Xiao; Michael Keller; Michael Palace; Gregory P. Asner; Rob Braswell; Eduardo S. Brondizio; Manoel Cardoso; Cláudio José Reis Carvalho; Matthew G. Fearon; Liane S. Guild; Steve Hagen; Scott Hetrick; Berrien Moore; Carlos A. Nobre; Jane M. Read; T. D. Sa; Annette L. Schloss; George L. Vourlitis; Albertus J. Wickel


Global Change Biology | 2004

Short- and long-term greenhouse gas and radiative forcing impacts of changing water management in Asian rice paddies

Steve Frolking; Changsheng Li; Rob Braswell; Jan S. Fuglestvedt


Archive | 2000

A Bayesian Unmixing Algorithm for Retrieving Landcover Distributions Using Global Reflectance Data

Rob Braswell; Ernst Linder; Stephen Hagen; Xiangming Xiao; Steve Frolking; Berrien Moore


2014 AGU Fall Meeting | 2014

Multi-sensor remote sensing of the extent and persistence of the 2005 Amazon drought

Steve Frolking; Rob Braswell; Tom Milliman; M Alonzo; Stephen J. Hagen; Michael Palace


Archive | 2012

Global Analysis of the Growth of Large Cities, 1999-2009, as Seen With the Seawinds Scatterometer and DMSP/OLS Nighttime Lights

Steve Frolking; Tom Milliman; Mark A. Friedl; Stephen J. Hagen; Rob Braswell


Archive | 2010

Comparing near-earth and satellite remote sensing based phenophase estimates: an analysis using multiple webcams and MODIS

Koen Hufkens; Andrew D. Richardson; Steve Frolking; Rob Braswell; Tom Milliman; Mark A. Friedl


Archive | 2010

Regional-to-continental scale monitoring of phenology using remote sensing with a network of digital cameras: Progress and results from PhenoCam

Mark A. Friedl; Andrew D. Richardson; Koen Hufkens; Rob Braswell; Micro Migliavacca; Tom Milliman; Steve Frolking


Archive | 2007

Severe storms and blow-down disturbances in the Amazon forest

Fernando Del Bon Espírito-Santo; Michael Keller; Rob Braswell; Bruce Walker Nelson; G Vicente; Steve Frolking


Archive | 2002

Satellite-Based Observations of Inter-annual Variation of Vegetation Water Content and Productivity in Northern Asia During 1998-2001

Xiangming Xiao; Rob Braswell; Qiu Zhang; Stephen Boles; Steve Frolking; Berrien Moore

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Steve Frolking

University of New Hampshire

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Tom Milliman

University of New Hampshire

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George L. Vourlitis

California State University San Marcos

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Gregory P. Asner

Carnegie Institution for Science

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Michael Keller

United States Forest Service

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