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

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Abstract

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 19732000, 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. © 2010 by American Institute of Biological Sciences. All rights reserved.

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Drummond, M. A., & Loveland, T. R. (2010). Land-use pressure and a transition to forest-cover loss in the Eastern United States. BioScience, 60(4), 286–298. https://doi.org/10.1525/bio.2010.60.4.7

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