PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Private lands stalling Brazil’s conservation efforts

Private lands stalling Brazil’s conservation efforts
2023-04-13
(Press-News.org) As Brazil seeks ways to protect its crucial Amazon Forest, a new study shows that excusing private landowners from conserving their precious land has come at a steep cost to global sustainability.

In this week’s Nature Communications Earth & Environment, scientists at Michigan State University’s Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability (MSU-CSIS) as well as Brazil and the UK found that since 2012 more than half of the deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has taken place on designated private conservation areas within rural private properties. However, those conservation areas were designed by the national conservation forest policy aimed at restoring natural vegetation.

The amnesty granted to 80% of landowners of small properties in the Amazon prevented the restoration of 14.6 million hectares of agricultural land, with a carbon sequestration potential of 2.5 gigatonnes.

“It’s important to enlist owners of private properties – especially those in global biodiversity hotspots such as Brazil – to participate in practices that reduce the carbon emissions and mitigate climate change through carbon sequestration,” said co-author Jianguo “Jack” Liu, Rachel Carson Chair in Sustainability and CSIS director. “Our work to reveal the true nature of private rural lands in Brazil has great impact not just for that country, but for the entire world. Local drivers of climate change mitigation truly are a global issue.”

Brazil has since 2012 been modifying its Native Vegetation Protection Law in to encourage more regrowth of natural vegetation. As part of that effort, the government began collecting information from private landowners about how their land was being used – for farming, development, or being covered by natural vegetation.

The international team used that information to provide a first deep dive into the state of natural growth across Brazil, integrating self-declared land ownership and conservation data from landowners, which improve the assessment of policy compliance and conservation beyond what can be learned from satellite remotely sensed data alone.

“We’ve been able to pinpoint whether private properties were in compliance with national rules,” said lead author Ramon Bicudo. “We’ve found that enforcing Brazil’s Forest Code and demanding landowners comply would greatly increase the Brazilian carbon stocks which it needs to offset emissions.”

Granting the amnesty from the 1965 Code freed landowners from restoring 14 million hectares in small private properties in the Amazon. The researchers also found 3 million hectares amnestied in the Atlantic Forest - a global hotspot of biodiversity and the most endangered biome in Brazil with only approximately 15% of natural vegetation remnants.

Bicudo noted that showing how imprecisions in self-declared data may lead to large overlapping areas between private lands and protected areas and providing a suite of ways to deal with the enormous datasets of quantitative validation methods to deal with such a large dataset is a crucial step. Brazil is under increasing pressure to produce more soybeans and beef in private lands for both international and domestic markets, so having a tool to understand the state of private lands, and identify paths forward in forest governance, is crucial.

In addition to Liu and Bicudo, Daniel de Castro Victoria, Fábio Ávila Nossack, Andrés Viña, 

James D. A. Millington, Simone Aparecida Vieira, Mateus Batistella and Emilio Moran are authors of “Slow-down of deforestation following a Brazilian forest policy was less effective on private lands than in all conservation areas.”

The work was supported by the National Science Foundation and Michigan AgBioResearch.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Private lands stalling Brazil’s conservation efforts Private lands stalling Brazil’s conservation efforts 2 Private lands stalling Brazil’s conservation efforts 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Hairs that help fish feel–and humans hear

Hairs that help fish feel–and humans hear
2023-04-13
CLEVELAND–By discovering how zebrafish use their hair cells to detect distant movement, a team of Case Western Reserve scientists may have found a path to help explain human hearing loss.   Even though the tiny water creatures and humans would appear to have nothing in common, the structure and function of the hair cells on zebrafish skin are nearly identical to cochlear hair cells found in the human inner ear.   In addition, both the fish and human cell receptors have a type of protein known as an “ion channel,” which converts the waves that the cells detect into electrical impulses that carry useful information.   However, in humans, ...

Wildfires and animal biodiversity

2023-04-13
Wildfires. Many see them as purely destructive forces, disasters that blaze through a landscape, charring everything in their paths. But a study published in the journal Ecology Letters reminds us that wildfires are also generative forces, spurring biodiversity in their wakes. “There’s a fair amount of biodiversity research on fire and plants,” said Max Moritz, a wildfire specialist with UC CooperativeExtension who is based at UC Santa Barbara’s Bren School of Environmental Science & Management, and is the study’s lead author. Research has shown that in ecosystems where fire is a natural and regular occurrence, there ...

New look at climate data shows substantially wetter rain and snow days ahead

New look at climate data shows substantially wetter rain and snow days ahead
2023-04-13
A key source of information underpinning the upcoming National Climate Assessment suggests that heavy precipitation days historically experienced once in a century by Americans could in the future be experienced on several occasions in a lifetime.  Scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego and the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) report that extremely intense days of rain or snow will be more frequent by the end of this century than previously thought ...

Manchester graphene spin-out signs $1billion game-changing deal to help tackle global sustainability challenges

Manchester graphene spin-out signs $1billion game-changing deal to help tackle global sustainability challenges
2023-04-13
A spin-out company from the graphene innovation ecosystem at The University of Manchester has formed an international partnership that will spearhead an unprecedented scale-up of graphene-based technologies intended “to make a substantial impact on global CO2 emissions”.            UK-based Graphene Innovations Manchester Ltd (GIM), founded by University of Mancheser graduate Dr Vivek Koncherry, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Quazar Investment Company to create a new company in the UAE. Graphene innovation has " This agreement - ...

Will ChatGPT replace computational materials scientists?

Will ChatGPT replace computational materials scientists?
2023-04-13
“ChatGPT is a very impressive tool,” said paper author Zijian Hong, professor at the School of Materials Science and Engineering, Zhejiang University, China. “As a computational materials scientist, I’m always eager to embrace new tools, in particular, new tools in computer science and AI. Since the born of the new ChatGPT, I’m just wondering whether such a tool can assist us in computational materials science”   Hong explained that for a computational materials task, there are three main steps: building a model or a structure, writing ...

Towards a deeper understanding of turbulence in elastoviscoplastic fluids

Towards a deeper understanding of turbulence in elastoviscoplastic fluids
2023-04-13
Three-dimensional simulations shed light on how energy dissipates within non-Newtonian fluids (fluids in which viscosity depend on the shear rate.)  The result is valuable in the context of disaster forecast and management or industrial production.  Elastoviscoplastic (EVP) fluids like mud, concrete, and lava are a type of non-Newtonian fluid that exhibit both solid and fluid-like behavior depending on the forces they are subjected to (i.e., applied stress). Their flow behavior is more complex than that of Newtonian fluids, such as water and air, which have a constant viscosity. In a recent study, researchers ...

Stop signals reduce dopamine levels and dancing in honeybees

Stop signals reduce dopamine levels and dancing in honeybees
2023-04-13
Researchers from the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of California San Diego have revealed that receiving an inhibitory signal (stop signal) associated with negative food conditions can decrease brain dopamine levels in dancing honeybees. The study was published in Current Biology on April 13. Dopamine is known as the feel-good neurotransmitter—a chemical that ferries information between neurons. In multiple animals, dopamine is involved in arousal, cognition, and sensitivity to stimuli. It is also associated with seeking and wanting behavior, particularly ...

Health care–associated infections among hospitalized patients with vs without COVID-19

2023-04-13
About The Study: In this analysis of more than 5 million hospitalizations between 2020 and 2022, health care–associated infection (HAI) occurrence among inpatients without COVID-19 was similar to that during 2019 despite additional pressures for infection control and health care professionals. The findings suggest that patients with COVID-19 may be more susceptible to HAIs and may require additional prevention measures.  Authors: Kenneth E. Sands, M.D., M.P.H., of HCA Healthcare in Nashville, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.8059) Editor’s ...

Risk of new retinal vascular occlusion after mRNA COVID-19 vaccination

2023-04-13
About The Study: The findings of this study including more than 3 million patients receiving the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine suggest that retinal vascular occlusion (RVO) diagnosed acutely after vaccination occurs extremely rarely at rates similar to those of two different historically used vaccinations, the influenza and tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis (Tdap) vaccines. No evidence suggesting an association between the mRNA COVID-19 vaccination and newly diagnosed RVO was found. Authors: Rishi P. Singh, M.D., of ...

[EMBARGOED] The 2020 election saw fewer people clicking on misinformation websites, Stanford study finds

2023-04-13
In the run-up to the 2020 election, people appear to have become savvier in spotting misinformation online: clicks onto unreliable websites have declined, according to a new Stanford study published April 13 in the journal Nature Human Behaviour. According to prior research, some 44.3 percent of Americans visited websites during the 2016 U.S. election that repeatedly made false or misleading information.  During the 2020 election, Stanford scholars saw that number drop by nearly half to 26.2 percent. While these findings ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Hormone therapy reshapes the skeleton in transgender individuals who previously blocked puberty

Evaluating performance and agreement of coronary heart disease polygenic risk scores

Heart failure in zero gravity— external constraint and cardiac hemodynamics

Amid record year for dengue infections, new study finds climate change responsible for 19% of today’s rising dengue burden

New study finds air pollution increases inflammation primarily in patients with heart disease

AI finds undiagnosed liver disease in early stages

The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announce new research fellowship in malaria genomics in honor of professor Dominic Kwiatkowski

Excessive screen time linked to early puberty and accelerated bone growth

First nationwide study discovers link between delayed puberty in boys and increased hospital visits

Traditional Mayan practices have long promoted unique levels of family harmony. But what effect is globalization having?

New microfluidic device reveals how the shape of a tumour can predict a cancer’s aggressiveness

Speech Accessibility Project partners with The Matthew Foundation, Massachusetts Down Syndrome Congress

Mass General Brigham researchers find too much sitting hurts the heart

New study shows how salmonella tricks gut defenses to cause infection

Study challenges assumptions about how tuberculosis bacteria grow

NASA Goddard Lidar team receives Center Innovation Award for Advancements

Can AI improve plant-based meats?

How microbes create the most toxic form of mercury

‘Walk this Way’: FSU researchers’ model explains how ants create trails to multiple food sources

A new CNIC study describes a mechanism whereby cells respond to mechanical signals from their surroundings

Study uncovers earliest evidence of humans using fire to shape the landscape of Tasmania

Researchers uncover Achilles heel of antibiotic-resistant bacteria

Scientists uncover earliest evidence of fire use to manage Tasmanian landscape

Interpreting population mean treatment effects in the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire

Targeting carbohydrate metabolism in colorectal cancer: Synergy of therapies

Stress makes mice’s memories less specific

Research finds no significant negative impact of repealing a Depression-era law allowing companies to pay workers with disabilities below minimum wage

Resilience index needed to keep us within planet’s ‘safe operating space’

How stress is fundamentally changing our memories

Time in nature benefits children with mental health difficulties: study

[Press-News.org] Private lands stalling Brazil’s conservation efforts