 I'm, as I said, I'm a forest oncologist so I'm mainly looking at the impact of logging on the resilience of tropical forest. We have two presentations, one yesterday it was about the contribution, the possible contribution of forest management into the small farm system in the Amazon. We were coordinating, I was coordinating a project in the Brazilian Amazon looking at the contribution of forest management into the incomes of the small farmers. Something that is very important in the Brazilian Amazon because first the forest the forest code required that each farmer must preserve at least 50% of its land into forest land and also because those small farmers are all more than 12 million hectares of forest and then all the problematic is to know how they could get money from this forest. I was moderating this morning a session about the resilience of managed and logged over forest in the tropics so we are building up a network, an international network, including the Amazon basin, the Congo basin and Southeast Asia and we are working with permanent sample plots that has been set up for some of them 30 years ago and they are monitoring the dynamics of the forest after logging and we are looking in each region how those forests respond to logging and to climate change. First it was to emphasize the importance of the role of forest in small farmers in the Amazon and put some numbers. We have a lot of study emphasizing the importance of forest but we have very few study saying how much a forest can can earn for the small farmers. So it was for me important to be to this session yesterday which was a session actually of presentation of a book that will be published by the WFSE project from Eufro which would be published and launched in the next work Forestry Congress in 2014. For my expert in them from the Brazilian Amazon I think one of the main challenge what we what we know already is that even the deforestation rate in Brazil has decreased tremendously but because of control but also repression from the government state. Now I think that the second phase would be to promote forestry for small farmers because some studies seems to show that big farmers already adapted to the new requirement of the government but for small farmers they don't have any choice. If we want to promote some alternative we will have to support them in terms of training but in terms also of feelings of feelings and one of the main challenge I think for the Brazilian Amazon is to develop forestry for small farmers which has particular characteristics and so far the forest regulation is mainly adapted to big company which cover with the big areas of concession.