New map helps distinguish between cyclical farming and deforestation in the Congo Basin
Study shows that 92.2 percent of tree cover loss in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and 48.2 percent in the Republic of Congo (ROC) is linked to small-scale shifting cultivation. Global Land Analysis and Discovery (GLAD) and World Resources Institute’s Congo team mapped the rural complex of DRC and ROC, with forest fragmentation to differentiate between the rural complex, fragmented forest and undisturbed forest. The DRC and ROC rural complex maps together enable better understanding which loss is caused by shifting cultivation cycling back to previously farmed areas, and which shows new deforestation, degradation or fragmentation.
- Global Forest Watch
- Deforestation
- Forest fragmentation
- cyclical farming
- 92.2 percent of tree cover loss
- small-scale shifting cultivation
- Global Land Analysis and Discovery (GLAD)
- World Resources Institute’s Congo
- Undisturbed forest
- degradation
- fragmentation