期刊论文详细信息
Global Ecology and Conservation
Reconciling resource extraction and species conservation in a multi-use landscape: Immediate and long-term impacts of logging on rainforest mammal diversity
Brent Loken1  Jedediah F. Brodie2  Jennifer L. Wall3 
[1] Corresponding author.;Global Food Lead Scientist, WWF, Stockholm, Sweden;Wildlife Biology Program, The University of Montana, 32 Campus Drive, Missoula, MT 59812, USA;
关键词: Biodiversity;    Land sharing;    Land sparing;    Sustainable development;    Timber harvest;    Tropical rainforest;   
DOI  :  
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Tropical forest ecosystems are the most species-rich in the world and face intense pressures from land conversion. If done well, selective logging can be an important way of supporting local economies while minimally impacting wildlife. However, most studies on how selective logging affects wildlife come from sites that have been logged some time ago, often a decade or more. Here we assess how logging affects species assemblages in the very short term, immediately after the cessation of timber operations. We estimated overall mammal species richness in unlogged forest, previously logged forest, and an active logging concession in Indonesian Borneo using rarefaction-extrapolation-based diversity estimators. We found that estimated species richness did not differ significantly between unlogged forest (15.5 ± 2.82 species), previously logged forest (14.5 ± 2.10), or recently logged sites (14.2 ± 1.45) sites. Our findings suggest that the short-term impacts of properly managed selective logging are on par with the longer-term impacts that have been assessed in many prior studies.

【 授权许可】

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