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Fallow lands --- Natural resources --- Swamps --- Water-supply --- History
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Si l’on cesse de regarder le paysage comme l’objet d’une industrie on découvre subitement – est-ce un oubli du cartographe, une négligence du politique ? – une quantité d’espaces indécis, dépourvus de fonction sur lesquels il est difficile de porter un nom. Cet ensemble n’appartient ni au territoire de l’ombre ni à celui de la lumière. Il se situe aux marges. Gilles Clément porte son regard sur les lisières, les marges de champs, les terrains en attente, les reliquats non exploités du paysage. En suivant point par point ce manifeste, le lecteur comprendra que le Tiers paysage relève d’une perception, d’une relation d’un certain type au vivant, à l’espace et aux institutions qui en prennent en charge l’aménagement. Ce texte invite à cultiver des espaces de « non-agir » à tous les niveaux de nos vies, à l’heure où les injonctions climatiques et économiques peuvent nous sembler contradictoires – urgence à agir d’un côté et visions effondristes de l’autre. Paru il y a près de vingt ans, ce manifeste est aujourd’hui accompagné d’un état des lieux des mises en pratique de Tiers paysages donnant ainsi à voir le chemin parcouru depuis sa première édition. Il est introduit par Alexis Pernet, qui interroge le statut de ce texte hors norme et redessine le cheminement d’une pensée qui, assurément, a profondément marqué le paysage.
Paysage --- Philosophie --- Ecological landscape design. --- Fallow lands. --- Landscape design --- Protected areas. --- Waste lands. --- Philosophy. --- Philosophie. --- Ecological landscape design --- Protected areas --- Fallow lands --- Waste lands --- Philosophy --- Landscape design - Philosophy
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eebo-0147
Fallow lands --- Land use, Rural --- Law and legislation --- Great Britain --- History
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eebo-0147
Game laws --- Wildlife management --- Fallow lands --- Land use, Rural --- Law and legislation --- Great Britain --- History
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Fallow lands --- Forest conservation --- Forest degradation --- Indigenous peoples --- Shifting cultivation --- Sustainable agriculture --- Traditional farming --- Ecology
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eebo-0147
Game laws --- Wildlife management --- Fallow lands --- Land use, Rural --- Law and legislation --- Great Britain --- History
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Lepidoptera --- Meadow ecology --- Fallow lands --- Habitat --- -Lepidoptera --- -Meadow ecology --- -Meadows --- Ecology --- Lepidopterans --- Macrolepidoptera --- Microlepidoptera --- Insects --- Fallow --- Lands, Fallow --- Land use --- -Ecology --- GER Germany --- butterflies --- land management --- -Habitat --- -Fallow lands --- Meadows --- Lepidoptera - Habitat - Switzerland - Graubunden --- Meadow ecology - Switzerland - Graubunden --- Fallow lands - Switzerland - Graubunden
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The book reviews the literature on the ecological succession of plants on fallowed swiddens in tropical forests. Patterns of ecological succession in tropical forests are insufficiently understood, partly because results are scattered through a large number of case studies reported in academic articles. So far, no publication has attempted to bring these different case studies together to identify common patters and trends. The goal of the book is to review the different case studies, and identify common patterns of ecological succession in fallowed swiddens, as well as to pinpoint the factors that cause ecological succession in some areas to differ from those in other areas. The book is organised in four different sections: forest structure, forest diversity, species composition, and the factors that contribute to differences in forest recovery rates (the number of times the field was burned, the length of fallow period, the type of soil, and the type of forest). This book is an important contribution to tropical forestry and shifting cultivation. Deforestation and forest degradation are the largest sources of CO2, and shifting cultivation is one of the main culprits. For this (and other economic and political) reason governments attempt to curtail shifting cultivation by shortening the years the fields can be left fallow, or outright outlawing the farming practice. Yet, there is insufficient understanding of the processes of ecological succession in fallows, which raises the questions as to whether the policy fulfils its objectives. .
Ecological succession. --- Forest plants. --- Rain forest ecology. --- Equatorial forest ecology --- Rain forest ecology --- Rain forests --- Tropical rain forest ecology --- Forest botany --- Forest flora --- Forest vegetation --- Forest wildlife plants --- Forest-zone plants --- Wildlife plants, Forest --- Woodland plants --- Woodland vegetation --- Biotic succession --- Succession, Ecological --- Ecology --- Ecological succession -- Australia -- Queensland. --- Restoration ecology -- Australia -- Queensland. --- Forest succession --- Fallow lands --- Life sciences. --- Biodiversity. --- Plant ecology. --- Forestry. --- Plant science. --- Botany. --- Life Sciences. --- Plant Ecology. --- Plant Sciences. --- Forest ecology --- Forests and forestry --- Plants --- Woodland garden plants --- Forests and forestry. --- Botanical science --- Phytobiology --- Phytography --- Phytology --- Plant biology --- Plant science --- Biology --- Natural history --- Forest land --- Forest lands --- Forest planting --- Forest production --- Forest sciences --- Forestation --- Forested lands --- Forestland --- Forestlands --- Forestry --- Forestry industry --- Forestry sciences --- Land, Forest --- Lands, Forest --- Silviculture --- Sylviculture --- Woodlands --- Woods (Forests) --- Agriculture --- Natural resources --- Afforestation --- Arboriculture --- Logging --- Timber --- Tree crops --- Trees --- Biological diversification --- Biological diversity --- Biotic diversity --- Diversification, Biological --- Diversity, Biological --- Biocomplexity --- Ecological heterogeneity --- Numbers of species --- Botany --- Phytoecology --- Vegetation ecology --- Floristic botany --- Floristic ecology
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