Instituto Tecnológico Vale, Belém, Pará, Brazil.
Geosciences Institute, Universidade Federal do Pará, Belém, Pará, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2019 Jan 17;14(1):e0211095. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0211095. eCollection 2019.
The eastern Brazilian Amazon contains many isolated ferruginous savanna ecosystem patches (locally known as 'canga vegetation') located on ironstone rocky outcrops on the top of plateaus and ridges, surrounded by tropical rainforests. In the Carajás Mineral Province (CMP), these outcrops contain large iron ore reserves that have been exploited by opencast mining since the 1980s. The canga vegetation is particularly impacted by mining, since the iron ores that occur are associated with this type of vegetation and currently, little is known regarding the extent of canga vegetation patches before mining activities began. This information is important for quantifying the impact of mining, in addition to helping plan conservation programmes. Here, land cover changes of the Canga area in the CMP are evaluated by estimating the pre-mining area of canga patches and comparing it to the actual extent of canga patches. We mapped canga vegetation using geographic object-based image analysis (GEOBIA) from 1973 Landsat-1 MSS, 1984 and 2001 Landsat-5 TM, and 2016 Landsat-8 OLI images, and found that canga vegetation originally occupied an area of 144.2 km2 before mining exploitation. By 2016, 19.6% of the canga area was lost in the CMP due to conversion to other land-use types (mining areas, pasturelands). In the Carajás National Forest (CNF), located within the CMP, the original canga vegetation covered 105.2 km2 (2.55% of the CNF total area), and in 2016, canga vegetation occupied an area of 77.2 km2 (1.87%). Therefore, after more than three decades of mineral exploitation, less than 20% of the total canga area was lost. Currently, 21% of the canga area in the CMP is protected by the Campos Ferruginosos National Park. By documenting the initial extent of canga vegetation in the eastern Amazon and the extent to which it has been lost due to mining operations, the results of this work are the first step towards conserving this ecosystem.
巴西东部亚马逊地区有许多孤立的铁矿区稀树草原生态系统斑块(当地称为“铁矿区植被”),位于高原和山脊顶部的铁矿石露头处,周围是热带雨林。在卡拉加斯矿业省(CMP),这些露头处含有大量铁矿石,自 20 世纪 80 年代以来,露天开采一直在开采这些铁矿石。铁矿区植被受到采矿的严重影响,因为所产生的铁矿石与这种植被类型有关,而且目前,对于采矿活动开始之前的铁矿区植被斑块的范围知之甚少。这些信息对于量化采矿的影响很重要,同时也有助于规划保护计划。在这里,通过估计铁矿区植被斑块的采矿前面积,并将其与实际的铁矿区植被斑块面积进行比较,来评估 CMP 中 Canga 地区的土地覆盖变化。我们使用基于地理对象的图像分析(GEOBIA)从 1973 年的 Landsat-1 MSS、1984 年和 2001 年的 Landsat-5 TM 以及 2016 年的 Landsat-8 OLI 图像中对铁矿区植被进行了绘制,并发现采矿前铁矿区植被斑块最初占地 144.2 平方公里。到 2016 年,由于向其他土地利用类型(矿区、牧场)的转变,CMP 中已有 19.6%的铁矿区植被消失。在 CMP 内的卡拉加斯国家森林(CNF),原来的铁矿区植被占地 105.2 平方公里(占 CNF 总面积的 2.55%),而到 2016 年,铁矿区植被占地 77.2 平方公里(1.87%)。因此,在经过三十多年的矿产开采后,铁矿区植被总面积的不到 20%已经消失。目前,CMP 内的铁矿区植被有 21%受到铁矿区国家公园的保护。通过记录亚马逊东部铁矿区植被的初始范围以及由于采矿作业而丧失的范围,这项工作的结果是保护这一生态系统的第一步。