Your search found 3 records
1 Bajracharya, B.. 1994. Gender issues in Nepali agriculture: A review. Kathmandu, Nepal: HMG Ministry of Agriculture. iii, 78p. (Research report series no.25)
Gender relations ; Agricultural manpower ; Female labor ; Women in development ; Rural women ; Agricultural production ; Decision making ; Agricultural extension ; Policy ; Non-governmental organizations ; Research institutes / Nepal
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 630.88042 G726 BAJ Record No: H015047)

2 Bajracharya, B.. 1993. Gender roles in agroforestry system in the eastern hills of Nepal: Case study of Salle Village. A thesis submitted to the Graduate School in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Agriculture (Agricultural Systems), Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, Thailand. xxiii, 201p.
Gender ; Women in development ; Woman's status ; Agroforestry ; Villages ; Social aspects ; Labor ; Female labor ; Rural women ; Farmers ; Land use ; Farming systems ; Crop production ; Animal husbandry ; Livestock ; Households ; Decision making ; Fodder ; Forestry ; Case studies / Nepal / Salle Village
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: D 630.88042 G726 BAJ Record No: H021771)

3 Amarnath, Giriraj; Bajracharya, B.; Shrestha, B. 2012. Geoinformatics for landscape ecology and biodiversity research. Asian Journal of Geoinformatics, 12(1):10p.
Remote sensing ; GIS ; Biodiversity ; Landscape ecology ; Monitoring ; Forests ; Satellite surveys ; Land use ; Land cover
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H044859)
http://geoportal.icimod.org/downloads/2012/GeoinformaticsforLandscapeEcologyandBiodiversity%20Research.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H044859.pdf
(6.86 MB)
This review paper evaluates the potential of remote sensing for assessing landscape and species diversity in mountainous terrain. Understanding the complex mechanism of biodiversity necessitate its spatial and temporal dynamics and synergetic adoption of measurement approaches with long-term plot inventories. In view of this, importance of geoinformatics - which can be seen as a combination of integrating tools such as Geographic Information System (GIS), satellite remote sensing, Global Positioning System (GPS), and information and communication technologies, are realized as complimentary systems to ground-based studies. This paper addresses how wide range of geospatial tools can be used in monitoring and assessment of biodiversity. Further discussions are made on the wide variety of landscape ecological application tools, and the required data from broad spatial extents that cannot be collected through field-based methods. Remote sensing data and techniques address these needs, which include identifying and detailing the biophysical characteristics of species’ habitats, predicting the distribution of species and spatial variability in species richness, and detecting natural and human-caused changes at scales ranging from individual landscapes to the entire world.

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