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How Nepal Grew Back Its Forests - NYTimes

How Nepal Grew Back Its Forests - NYTimes

Submitted by meghavi on

A study led by LCLUC PI Dr. Jefferson Fox (East West Center) and his team was featured in the New York Times. Nepal is showing results after decades of effort, a rare success story in a world of climate disasters and despair. Community-managed forests now account for more than a third of Nepal’s forest cover, which has grown by about 22 percent since 1988, according to government data. Independent studies also confirm that greenery in Nepal has sprung back, with forests now covering 45 percent of the country’s land.

Applications Programmer with advanced MATLAB programming skills to support ongoing CSTARS research program

Applications Programmer with advanced MATLAB programming skills to support ongoing CSTARS research program

Department Description

Dr. Susan Ustin’s Center for Spatial Technologies and Remote Sensing (CSTARS) at UC Davis Institute of Environment is known for nearly 30 years as one of strongest environmental remote sensing groups in the United States, with a decade-long expertise in developing, prototyping, and operating automated satellite data processing algorithms and research prototype software systems and platforms supporting scientific research and operational decision making by the state and federal natural resource management agencies.

Vast tropical tree farms push into biodiversity hotspots

Vast tropical tree farms push into biodiversity hotspots

Submitted by meghavi on

Much of the tree growth in the tropics in the first decade of the century consists of plantations — not natural forest. The LCLUC project  findings by PI Nick Magliocca, Co-I Mathew Fagan and team got featured in Nature's Research Highlights.

Commercial tree plantations make up a much larger share of the increase in tree cover in the tropics between 2000 and 2012 than national data would indicate1.