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  • Source: Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) - http://www.tpdc-tz.com/tpdc/. 2013. Exploration Activity map, Licensing situation - June 2013

  • Source: National Forest Resources Monitoring and Assessment of Tanzania (NAFORMA). 2016. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Methodology: This map shows the predicted above ground biomass [Mg per ha] at 30 m spatial resolution. It has been created using the k nearest neighbour (knn) approach, with the NAFORMA field data on above ground biomass as training data. The ancillary data used for prediction included Landsat 8, ALOS and Sentinel 1 data.

  • Tanzania Forest Service 2013. Forest Reserves of Tanzania - http://www.tfs.go.tz/

  • Source: National Forest Resources Monitoring and Assessment of Tanzania (NAFORMA). 2015. Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, Tanzania. Methodology: This map shows the predicted above ground biomass [MG per ha] at 250 m resolution. It has been created by using the NAFORMA field data on above ground biomass as training data, and using random forest as model. The ancillary data used for prediction included NDVI and seasonal parameters derived from MODIS data, elevation, as well as climatic variables.

  • Source: Jones, T., Caro, T. & Davenport, T.R.B. (Eds.). 2009. Wildlife Corridors in Tanzania - http://www.tzwildlifecorridors.org. Unpublished report. Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute (TAWIRI) , Arusha. 60 pp - http://www.tawiri.or.tz/. Contact for this data: [email protected] Methodology: This shapefile has been created by UNEP-WCMC and Tanzania Forest Service based on the individual location maps at Tanzania Wildlife Corridors - http://www.tzwildlifecorridors.org - (accessed May 2013). One line has been drawn by hand to represent one corridor.

  • Source: Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) - http://www.tpdc-tz.com/tpdc/

  • Source: National Forest Resources Monitoring and Assessment of Tanzania (NAFORMA). 2015. Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, Tanzania. Methodology: The map shows the locations of NAFORMA clusters where edible plants were observed. Background:Non-timber forest products are important benefits that the forest provide to the population of Tanzania. REDD+ activities could be designed to assist communities to sustainably extract subsistence or income sources from the forest, where possible. In Tanzania, beekeeping activities can be a potentially sustainable forest supported livelihood source. Activities were found concentrated in forests south of Tabora.

  • Source: IUCN and UNEP-WCMC. 2013. The World Database on Protected Areas (WDPA) Cambridge, UK. Available at www.protectedplanet.net