Monitoring extinction: defaunation, technology and the biopolitics of conservation in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2021-10-27 DOI:10.2458/jpe.3044
Thomas Kiggell
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Due to habitat fragmentation, Brazil's Atlantic Forest is considered one of the world's most threatened biodiversity hotspots. Much of the biome has become extinct of its largest-bodied mammals,leading some to refer it as a 'half-empty forest.' One of the ways conservation actors are responding to this crisis is by utilizing Global Positioning System(GPS), camera trapping, and remote sensing satellite imagery. Together, these tools enable the collection of data at unprecedent levels. By intensifying wildlife monitoring, it is thought that better-directed actions can be taken to avoid species extinction. Although there is a nascent body of research in political ecology examining the role of these new technologies in conservation,so far there has been little exploration of what this implies for the transformation of the governance of conservation spaces. Bringing together literatures on biopolitics of conservation and conservation technologies, this article reflects on the ways new technologies are changing the biopolitical governance of conservation in the Atlantic Forest. I argue that the increase of information flows, together with the ability to process data through models and algorithms, intensifies the capability of biopolitical governance to justify claims for new protected areas, while changing ecological subjectivities. With the increased use of remote sensing technologies, some ecologists are being distanced from the field, and are consequently having less interactions with rural communities. As pressures on biodiversity increase, this may facilitate advocacy for coercive conservation measures that have adverse impacts on local communities.
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监测灭绝:巴西大西洋森林的退化、技术和保护的生物政治
由于栖息地破碎,巴西的大西洋森林被认为是世界上最受威胁的生物多样性热点之一。大部分生物群落中体型最大的哺乳动物已经灭绝,导致一些人将其称为“半空森林”。保护行为者应对这场危机的方法之一是利用全球定位系统(GPS)、相机陷阱和遥感卫星图像。总之,这些工具能够以前所未有的水平收集数据。通过加强对野生动物的监测,人们认为可以采取更有针对性的行动来避免物种灭绝。虽然在政治生态学中有一个新兴的研究机构在研究这些新技术在保护中的作用,但到目前为止,很少有人探索这对保护空间治理的转变意味着什么。本文结合有关保护生物政治和保护技术的文献,对新技术改变大西洋森林保护生物政治治理的方式进行了反思。我认为,信息流的增加,以及通过模型和算法处理数据的能力,加强了生物政治治理的能力,以证明对新保护区的要求是合理的,同时改变了生态主体性。随着遥感技术使用的增加,一些生态学家离野外越来越远,因此与农村社区的互动越来越少。随着对生物多样性的压力增加,这可能有助于倡导对当地社区产生不利影响的强制性保护措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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