Fire and restoration of the largest urban forest of the world in Rio de Janeiro City, Brazil

被引:21
|
作者
D.M. Silva Matos
C. Junius F. Santos
D. de R. Chevalier
机构
[1] Universidade do Rio de Janeiro (UNIRIO),Depto de Ciências Naturais, ECB
[2] IBAMA,Ediffcio Sede, SAIN
[3] IBAMA,undefined
关键词
wildfires; Atlantic Forest; Tropical Forest; conservation; Rio de Janeiro;
D O I
10.1023/A:1026164427792
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
National Park of Tijuca in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) is about 3,300 ha and considered the largest urban forest in the world. Its floristic composition is typical of Atlantic Rain Forest. The reserve is being altered because of fire occurrences and urban expansion. This study identified locations and causes of forest fires, and makes management recommendations to restore damaged areas. From 1991 to 2000, forest firefighters recorded an average of 75-fire occurrences/year. Identified causes included hot air balloons (24%), intentional (24%), rubbish burning (21%) and religious practices (17%). Primary fuels included invasive grasses and ferns. Although hot air balloons destroyed larger areas of forest in each occurrence, a greater number of fires started in the invasive vegetation along roads that bisect the forest. In response to recurrent forests, invasive vegetation has spread gradually into the forest increasing forest degradation. To decrease fire damage, sites with high fire frequencies and density of invasive vegetation were planted with less flammable species. Results indicate that fire frequency decreased and density of invasive vegetation declined. This approach appears to prevent fire incidence, reduce the need for fire fighting, and preserve existing biodiversity.
引用
收藏
页码:151 / 161
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] BTEX Emissions from the Largest Landfill in Operation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    Priscilla Falcão de Sá Borba
    Eduardo Monteiro Martins
    Elisabeth Ritter
    Sergio Machado Corrêa
    Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 2017, 98 : 624 - 631
  • [22] BTEX Emissions from the Largest Landfill in Operation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    de Sa Borba, Priscilla Falco
    Martins, Eduardo Monteiro
    Ritter, Elisabeth
    Correa, Sergio Machado
    BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY, 2017, 98 (05) : 624 - 631
  • [23] BTEX IMPACIS IN URBAN AREAS OF THE CITY OF RIO DE JANEIRO
    Bastos Carvalho, Josie Batista
    Nunes Fortes, Julio Domingos
    Correa, Sergio Machado
    Martins, Eduardo Monteiro
    QUIMICA NOVA, 2020, 43 (07): : 870 - 877
  • [24] BTEX Emissions from the Largest Landfill in Operation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    de Sá Borba, Priscilla Falcão
    Martins, Eduardo Monteiro
    Ritter, Elisabeth
    Corrêa, Sergio Machado
    Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 2017, 98 (05): : 624 - 631
  • [25] The end of the world in Rio (A social commentary from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
    Velasco-De-Arma, J
    NEW ENGLAND REVIEW-MIDDLEBURY SERIES, 2000, 21 (01): : 33 - 44
  • [26] Trace Metals in the Urban Aerosols of Rio de Janeiro City
    Loyola, Josiane
    Arbilla, Graciela
    Quiterio, Simone L.
    Escaleira, Viviane
    Minho, Alan S.
    JOURNAL OF THE BRAZILIAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2012, 23 (04) : 628 - 638
  • [27] Tijuca forest contribution to the improvement of air quality and wellbeing of citizens in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    Arbilla, Graciela
    Dantas, Guilherme
    da Silva, Cleyton M.
    Chemosphere, 2023, 334
  • [28] First molecular detection of adenoviruses in bats from an urban Atlantic Forest in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    Dias, Beatriz, V
    Lanzarini, Natalia M.
    de Moraes, Marcia T. B.
    Nordgren, Johan
    Moura, Patricia E. B.
    Moratelli, Ricardo
    Novaes, Roberto L. M.
    Costa-Neto, Socrates F.
    Verissimo, Iuri
    Miagostovich, Marize P.
    Ogrzewalska, Maria
    Bueno, Marina G.
    INFECTION GENETICS AND EVOLUTION, 2024, 126
  • [29] Shells, teeth and DNA: land snails from an urban forest in Rio de Janeiro, SE Brazil
    Fernandes, Mauricio Romulo
    Alexandre, Guilherme de Lima
    Salgueiro, Fabiano
    JOURNAL OF NATURAL HISTORY, 2025, 59 (1-4) : 129 - 169
  • [30] Bats from the Pedra Branca Forest, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    Tavares, Jonatas Amorim
    Morim Novaes, Roberto Leonan
    Verissimo, Iuri
    do Amaral Kuzel, Maria Alice
    da Costa-Neto, Socrates Fraga
    Rangel, Caroline Lacorte
    Borges, Mylena
    Medrado, Helena
    Alves, Bruno
    Souza, Renan de Franca
    Pinto Menezes, Ana Carolina
    Menezes-Junior, Luis Fernando
    Dias, Daniela
    de Andreazzi, Cecilia Siliansky
    Gentile, Rosana
    Moratelli, Ricardo
    BIODIVERSITY DATA JOURNAL, 2021, 9