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Kandia: threatened forest, threatened livelihood - a study of human-environment interaction in the Department of Velingara, Senegal

December 31, 1997

This case study is one of several carried out as part the Long-term Environmental Monitoring in Senegal Project. Co-financed by USAID and the U.S. Geological Survey's EROS Data Center (EDC), and implemented by EDC and the Centre de Suivi Ecologique (CSE), this project has carried out extensive monitoring of natural resources and land use patterns in Senegal in order to better understand the complex dynamics of change in semi-arid tropics. The monitoring, as carried out by EROS staff and their Senegalese collaborators, has involved use of information collected by remote sensing (satellite and aerial photographs) as well as extensive field work including the collection of physical information about soils, vegetation, land use practices, and biodiversity at 2 over 600 sites in all parts of the country (Tappan and Wood, 1995). This information provides a remarkable record of changes in physical and land cover parameters over the last 30 years. Figure 2 presents a satellite image of the eastern Kolda Region covering the Department of Velingara.

Publication Year 1997
Title Kandia: threatened forest, threatened livelihood - a study of human-environment interaction in the Department of Velingara, Senegal
DOI 10.3133/70157208
Authors Karen Schoonmaker Freudenberger, G. Gray Tappan
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Unnumbered Series
Index ID 70157208
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center