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Interest and initiatives in agroforestry education and training, as
in other aspects of agroforestry development, have increased
tremendously during the past decade. Coordination of such
educational activities was initiated by the first international
workshop on education in agroforestry organized by the
International Council for Research in Agroforestry (ICRAF) in Decem
ber 1982, at Nairobi, Kenya. Since then, agroforestry has been
incorporated into the curricula of many educational and training
institutions around the world. Moreover, several institutions have
developed entire academic programs specifically in agroforestry.
However, most of these activities are still isolated initiatives,
without common strategies or philosophies. This second
international agroforestry workshop was therefore planned to pro
vide a forum for reviewing progress, sharing programs and
experiences, and planning and coordinating future directions in
agroforestry education and training. The main objectives were to
review the on-going programs, to assess the scope of professional
education and training in relation to the perceived needs of
trained personnel, to recommend guidelines for further program
development, and to establish networking among institutions and
agencies involved in agroforestry education and training. These
proceedings contain the keynote papers, regional/country presenta
tions and conclusions and recommendations of the International
Workshop on Education and Training in Agroforestry held at the
University of Florida, Gainesville, USA in December, 1988. The
strategy of the workshop was to facilitate focused discussion on
identified issues by an invited group of world leaders in
agroforestry education and training."
Forests comprise the greatest storage of carbon on land, provide
fuel for millions, are the habitat for most terrestrial
biodiversity, and are critical to the economies of many countries.
Yet changes in the extent and dynamics of forests are inherently
difficult to detect and quantify. Remote sensing technologies may
facilitate the measurement of some key forest properties which,
when combined with other information contained in various computer
models, may allow for the quantification of critical forest
functions. This book explores how remote sensing and computer
modeling can be combined to estimate changes in the carbon storage,
or productivity, of forests - from the level of the leaf to the
level of the globe. Land managers, researchers, policy makers and
students will all find stimulating discussions among an
international set of experts at the cutting edge of the interface
between science, technology and management.
Interest and initiatives in agroforestry education and training, as
in other aspects of agroforestry development, have increased
tremendously during the past decade. Coordination of such
educational activities was initiated by the first international
workshop on education in agroforestry organized by the
International Council for Research in Agroforestry (ICRAF) in Decem
ber 1982, at Nairobi, Kenya. Since then, agroforestry has been
incorporated into the curricula of many educational and training
institutions around the world. Moreover, several institutions have
developed entire academic programs specifically in agroforestry.
However, most of these activities are still isolated initiatives,
without common strategies or philosophies. This second
international agroforestry workshop was therefore planned to pro
vide a forum for reviewing progress, sharing programs and
experiences, and planning and coordinating future directions in
agroforestry education and training. The main objectives were to
review the on-going programs, to assess the scope of professional
education and training in relation to the perceived needs of
trained personnel, to recommend guidelines for further program
development, and to establish networking among institutions and
agencies involved in agroforestry education and training. These
proceedings contain the keynote papers, regional/country presenta
tions and conclusions and recommendations of the International
Workshop on Education and Training in Agroforestry held at the
University of Florida, Gainesville, USA in December, 1988. The
strategy of the workshop was to facilitate focused discussion on
identified issues by an invited group of world leaders in
agroforestry education and training."
This type of exercise of review and analysis for one component
(carbon) of a relatively simple forest type is more generally
useful in focusing thought and perhaps field research; critical
knowledge gaps identified for pines presumably also apply to more
complex forest ecosystems. This volume also serves to illustrate
the value of comparative field studies, which in this case were
totally unplanned and retrospective.
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