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Land-use pressure and a transition to forest-cover loss in the Eastern United States

January 1, 2010

Contemporary land-use pressures have a significant impact on the extent and condition of forests in the eastern United States, causing a regional-scale decline in forest cover. Earlier in the 20th century, land cover was on a trajectory of forest expansion that followed agricultural abandonment. However, the potential for forest regeneration has slowed, and the extent of regional forest cover has declined by more than 4.0%. Using remote-sensing data, statistical sampling, and change-detection methods, this research shows how land conversion varies spatially and temporally across the East from 1973–2000, and how those changes affect regional land-change dynamics. The analysis shows that agricultural land use has continued to decline, and that this enables forest recovery; however, an important land-cover transition has occurred, from a mode of regional forest-cover gain to one of forest-cover loss caused by timber cutting cycles, urbanization, and other land-use demands.

Publication Year 2010
Title Land-use pressure and a transition to forest-cover loss in the Eastern United States
DOI 10.1525/bio.2010.60.4.7
Authors Mark A. Drummond, Thomas R. Loveland
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title BioScience
Index ID 70037207
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center