| Sumario: | Livestock production accounts for 30% of the world's land surface. In high to middle-income  countries, livestock production has increased over the last 60 years. In Honduras, livestock  represents 13% of annual GDP. Livestock production is affected by different factors, including  geographic and spatial factors. This study was conducted to analyze how geographic and spatial  factors affect livestock production in the Rio Platano Man and Biosphere Reserve (RPBR),  Honduras. The geographical factors that affect the cadaster and intensification of the farms  located in this area were analyzed. This study also used GIS-derived variables to explain, using  econometric Logit and Tobit models, the cadaster and intensification of cattle farms. The results  showed that the spatial factors that influence the probability that farms are cadastered or not  are the distance to the core zone of the reserve and the distance to the marketplace. On the  other hand, the factors that affect intensification are farm-specific factors such as area, number  of cattle, forest area, and factors determined by climatic conditions such as rainfall. The study  concludes that spatial and geographic factors influence some aspects of livestock production in  the Rio Platano Man and Biosphere Reserve. 
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