Notice: Undefined index: occurrence in /home/ft2025user/foreststreesagroforestry.org/wp-content/themes/FTA/single-dataset.php on line 8

The Sustainable Wetlands Adaptation and Mitigation Program (SWAMP) Vegetation


Notice: Undefined index: occurrence in /home/ft2025user/foreststreesagroforestry.org/wp-content/themes/FTA/functions.php on line 463

Kauffman, J., Bernardino, A., de O. Gomes, L., Ferreira, T., Giovannoni, L., Jimenez, L., Romero, D., Ruiz, F., Bhomia, R., Murdiyarso, D., Sasmito, S., Purbopuspito, J., Krisnawati, H., Kurnianto, S., Manuri, S., Taberima, S., Warren, M., McFadden, T., MacKenzie, R., Austin, K., June, T., Ngoc Nam, V., Saragi-Sasmito, M., Vien, N., Hanggara, B., Sasmito, S.D.

39

The compilation datasets of vegetation structure, biomass, and carbon stocks collected from tropical wetland ecosystems including mangrove and peatland. It is produced and compiled by SWAMP’s researchers between 2009 and 2019.

The Sustainable Wetlands Adaptation and Mitigation Program (SWAMP) is a collaborative effort by the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), the USDA Forest Service (USFS) and Oregon State University with support from the US Agency for International Development (USAID). SWAMP evolved from a multi-stakeholder exercise called the Tropical Wetlands Initiative for Climate Adaptation and Mitigation (TWINCAM), when the group was called to respond to a variety of challenges requested by stakeholders, ranging from local to global imperatives of sustainable wetlands management.

SWAMP quality assurance
FTA’s SWAMP datasets have been peer-reviewed to ensure that they meet CGIAR’s ‘quality of research for development’ (QoR4D) framework. This framework, developed with strong methodological contributions from FTA, comprises criteria for relevance, credibility, legitimacy and effectiveness.

Relevance
The SWAMP datasets have been independently evaluated as contributing to a well-defined research question important to forests, trees and agroforestry, and to FTA’s Theory of Change. The SWAMP datasets also contribute new knowledge on forests, trees and agroforestry.

Credibility
The credibility of the SWAMP datasets has been externally verified. The datasets belong to FTA partners – and can be used by FTA.

The SWAMP datasets have been generated through a rigorous research design; they are complete, curated and cleaned. The datasets, the underlying methods and related findings are robust, and sources of knowledge are dependable and sound.

Legitimacy
The SWAMP datasets have been assessed as meeting the criteria for legitimacy. Data have been collected following both Free Prior Informed Consent (FPIC) and the research ethics guidelines of FTA, ensuring the underlying research process is fair and ethical and perceived as such, including proper representation of all involved and consideration of interests and perspectives of intended users. Gender considerations, and thus a gender lens, is reflected in the data collected.

Effectiveness
The SWAMP datasets and related products and services are accessible and well positioned for uptake and use (by researchers and stakeholders), including capacity development and proper support to the enabling environment. SWAMP data on the FTA website are also available and accessible on the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH) interoperable repository site, Dataverse. Data are also described by sufficient metadata (CG-Core).

Metadata last modified: 2019-08-23
Publication date: 2019-08-23
Hosted by: Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)

Tell us your data story

Description


Warning: count(): Parameter must be an array or an object that implements Countable in /home/ft2025user/foreststreesagroforestry.org/wp-includes/post-template.php on line 324

Notice: Trying to access array offset on value of type float in /home/ft2025user/foreststreesagroforestry.org/wp-includes/post-template.php on line 330

Latest species datasets

The compilation datasets of vegetation structure, biomass, and carbon stocks collected from tropical wetland ecosystems including mangrove and peatlan...

Back to top

Sign up to our monthly newsletter

Connect with us