Publications
1: The Chiang Mai Research Agenda for Advancing Automated Forest Restoration
Two of the most important objectives of the workshop: “Automated Forest Restoration (AFR): Could Robots Revive Rainforests?” were: to design research programs to improve technologies for AFR,...
2: Agroforestry options for degraded landscapes in Southeast Asia
ABSTRACT: In Southeast Asia 8.5% of the global human population lives on 3.0% of the land area. With 7.9% of the global agricultural land base, the region has 14.7% and 28.9% of such land with at...
3: Automated vegetation monitoring for forest restoration
ABSTRACT: We discuss the potential of automating vegetation monitoring, to aid forest restoration. We propose that automated monitoring focuses on estimating forest biomass and tree diversity,...
4: Forest restoration at the landscape level in Thailand
Thailand is located in the Centre of the Indochina Peninsula, with a total land area of 513,115 sq km. Due to variations in climate and physiographical characteristics, various types of forests...
5: Integrating scientific research with community needs to restore a forest landscape in northern Thailand: a case study of Ban Mae Sa Mai
This book chapter was the first attempt to write up our collaborative work with the Hmong community of Ban Mae Sa Mai as a case study – exploring interactions between the scientific and...
6: The effects of forest restoration activities on the species diversity of naturally establishing trees and ground flora
The framework species method of forest restoration aims to rapidly re-establish forest ecosystem structure and function. At the same time, it aims to encourage wildlife, attracted to the planted...
7: Inter-relationships between wildlife and forest restoration
Implicit in the workshop’s title was the assumption that restoring tropical forests benefits wildlife. However, in SE Asia, this assumption has not been tested in restored forests. The purpose of...
8: Defining forest restoration for wildlife conservation
Deforestation in the tropics is now widely accepted as one of the greatest threats to wildlife on Earth. The last decade of the 20th century saw rapid changes in attitudes towards this problem and...
9: Low technology tree propagation and the restoration of natural forest ecosystems
ABSTRACT: Loss of forests, and their associated biodiversity, is a serious issue in many developing tropical countries. Throughout northern Thailand for example, large areas within national parks...
10: Forest restoration research in conservation areas in northern Thailand
Loss of forests and their associated biodiversity is a serious issue in many tropical countries. In Thailand, for example, forest cover has been reduced from about 53% in the early 1960s...
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