Full text: Proceedings, XXth congress (Part 7)

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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B7. Istanbul 2004 
DIA — direct influence area (AID — área de influéncia direta) 
— an area related to DAA and surroundings including the 
local draining and the spaces among neighbor farms which 
were not acquired. 
[IA — indirect influence area (AII — área de influéncia 
indireta) — na area that comprises the main draining basins 
involved in each project. 
MIA — municipal influence area (AIM — área de influéncia 
municipal) — an area that corresponds to the bigger 
surrounding municipalities wich border the project area. 
2.2.4  Cartograrphic Base Definition 
2.2.4.1 Projection and Cartographic Data System: 
The project of each Natural Reserve was executed according 
to the Brasilian Systematic Mapping (Mapeamento 
Sistemätico Brasileiro) model, in Universal Tranversa 
Mercator — UTM and Datum SAD-69. Considering the maps 
printing, the scale adopted was 1:10,000. 
2.2.4.2 Flight and Digital Orthophoto: 
photogrammetry services were hired using flights with a 
1:30,000 scale and generation of digital orthophotos in a 
1:10,000 scale. 
2.2.4.3 Digital Cartografic Base: Alongside with the 
orthophotos an hydrography restitution and the digital terrain 
model (DTM) were hired. Through the digitalization method 
over orthophoto in CAD software or with the data acquisition 
with GPS, the main roads and the importants sites inside the 
reserves were drawn, as well as an adaptation of other 
existing cartographic bases of the region. These data were : 
prepared and inserted into a GIS ambient (Geographic 
Information System), with insertion of complementary 
attributes as identification, dimensions and properties. 
Legends for each mapping issue were also defined. 
225 Prospection and Acquisition of the Areas: 
Perimeters Mapping and area description documents: At first 
all the areas to be acquired as well as their respective owners 
were identified based on maps furnished by the 
municipalities and by an agrarian inquiry. From the 
cartografic base, orthophotos and a GPS survey with more 
than 50 em precision, the agrarian information could be 
completed and checked, with the tabulation of the data 
related to the limits of the acquired properties aiming at the 
agrarian regularization. Each perimeter was shown in details 
in the area description documents and the maps. For the 
unification of the several perimeters maps area description 
documents were also being done, according to the Brazilian 
law requirements. 
22:52 Degraded Areas Quantification: Inside the 
properties perimeters the deforested areas were identified and 
quantified. For this purpose a visual interpretation of the 
photos were done, with the areas being drawn over the 
orthophoto in a GIS ambient. 
809 
2.3 Projects Execution Phases 
2.3.1 Detailed survey of the physical environment 
23.1.1 Cartographic information preparation: In 
order to ensure an adequate development of the work, 
cartographic information in a 1:10,000 scale in the hard copy 
and digital forms were supplied to the tecnnical staff 
responsible for the surveys in Soils, Geology and Vegetation. 
2.3.1.2 Support and orientation to the technical staff 
in each area: aiming at the several surveys being executed in 
an organized form and with facilities for inserting them into a 
GIS ambient, the GIS staff in charge of the projects kept a 
close contact with the field technician, giving them 
orientation about the working scales, digitalization forms of 
the data and methodologies for description of the ambients, 
in such a way that the data common to the GIS objects could 
be designated to the GIS objects (shapes, points, lines) in a 
simple and direct way. 
2.8.1.3 Survey conclusion: with the raw data sent by 
the technical staff, the next step was the edition and 
transformation of these data in polygons by means of the 
software tools of ArcInfo and ArcView. The attributes 
describing the polygons and other objects were inserted 
resulting in final maps in scale 1:10,000 for each one of the 
surveys. 
2.3.2 Forest Restoration 
2.3.2.1 Definition of the Priority Areas: With the 
help of the Forest Restoration technicians in the rules 
definition phase, it was stablished, from the cross-referencing 
of soil, geology and vegetation maps, which would be the 
priority areas for the forest restoration inside the reserves. 
Such rules were based on the ambient fragility, defining 
weights to each soil, geology and vegetation characteristic, 
which resulted in an environmental fragility map. 
2.3.2.2 Matrices Monitoring: Seeds from native trees 
are collected for the production of trees at nursery, 
designated for plantation in restoration areas. Each matrix 
tree is georeferenced with the help of a GPS equipment and 
then marked at the field. From the development of trees at 
nurserry it is possible to obtain the productiveness of each 
matrix tree considering the origin of the seeds. 
2.3.2.3 Forest Restoration Plan — Plantation: 
Homogeneous areas were defined based on the cross- 
referencing of vegetation, soils maps and the results of 
restoration priorities. Information concerning to accesses and 
slopes also took part of this work. With this crossing, 
restoration polygons with similar characteristics could be 
separated. Each of these areas receive different seed species, 
also with different planting spacing, treatment and 
maintenance. In addition, the access and slope of terrain 
information are still the basis for the definition of the trees 
plantation technique (by hand, with machines, with pole, 
etc). Each polygon in the GIS receives a number, that 
become the key between the mapping and the restoration 
data base. Besides serving as activity manager, the GIS sends 
additional information to the data base as area in hectares and 
 
	        
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