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Secondary forests as biodiversity repositories in human-modified landscapes: insights from the Neotropics
In: Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi. Ciências naturais, Band 7, Heft 3, S. 319-328
ISSN: 2317-6237
In this essay we examine some of the processes affecting the composition and structure of tree species assemblages and, consequently, what we can expect from secondary-forest stands as an element of human-modified landscapes and as an opportunity for biodiversity persistence in this ecological context. Based on the available information, it is reasonable to predict that in some landscapes or biotas: (1) small forest remnants degenerate and support plant assemblages with attributes similar to those observed in early and intermediate-aged regenerating stands, while secondary-forest stands move from initial to more advanced successional stages; (2) collectively, remnant/stand attributes and landscape integrity define the pace through which degeneration proceeds, but also the potential for regeneration; (3) at the landscape spatial scale, remnants and stands tend to converge in terms of structure, but also in terms of taxonomic and functional composition. In other words, remnants degenerate and secondary-forest stands regenerate toward a sort of 'climax community', which is conditioned by the physical and biological integrity of both patch and landscape. Considering secondary forests in the conceptual, ecological and spatial framework of human-modified landscapes may help us to understand and maximize the conservation services provided by this habitat as it proliferates through human-modified landscapes.
Coppicing as a Driver of Plant Resprouting and the Regeneration of a Caatinga Dry Forest
In: FORECO-D-22-01480
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Human Disturbances Reduce Tree Abundance and Stimulate Woody Plant Resprouting and Clonal Growth in a Tropical Dry Forest
In: FORECO-D-23-01203
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Priority setting for scaling-up tropical forest restoration projects: Early lessons from the Atlantic Forest Restoration Pact
In: Environmental science & policy, Band 33, S. 395-404
ISSN: 1462-9011
Exotic Goats Do Not Affect the Seed Bank But Reduce Seedling Survival in a Human-Modified Landscape of Caatinga Dry Forest
In: FORECO-D-22-00860
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