Restoration opportunities beyond highly degraded tropical forests: Insights from India's Western Ghats

被引:1
|
作者
Osuri, Anand M. [1 ]
Kasinathan, Srinivasan [1 ]
Raman, T. R. Shankar [1 ]
Mudappa, Divya [1 ]
机构
[1] Amritha, Nat Conservat Fdn, 1311,12th Cross,Vijayanagara 1st Stage, Mysore 570017, India
关键词
Arrested recovery; Carbon storage; Ecological restoration; Floristic impoverishment; Fragmentation; Threatened species; WOOD DENSITY; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.1016/j.biocon.2024.110519
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Tropical rainforest remnants in human-modified landscapes exhibit varying levels of degradation, from highly degraded open-canopied and invasive plant-invaded forests to closed-canopy forests that appear structurally intact. The former are frequently identified as being in a state of arrested recovery, and targeted for restoration, but restoration needs and opportunities in the latter remain underexplored. Using tree and seedling data from 105 plots spanning a canopy cover gradient in rainforest fragments and 19 plots in relatively-intact "reference" rainforests in India's Western Ghats mountains, we show that the floristic composition, conservation significance, and carbon stocks of closed-canopy fragments (CC) more closely resemble open-canopy fragments (OC) than reference rainforests (RR). For example, densities of old-growth forest species, endemic/threatened species, and carbon stocks, increased from 15 %, 28 %, and 22 % of reference values in OC to 32 %, 46 %, and 35 % in CC, respectively, while tree community similarity to RR showed no increase from OC to CC (15 %). Seedlings mirrored this pattern, offering little indication of natural recovery in closed-canopy fragments. Further, we show using simulations that seedling enrichment in closed-canopy fragments can initiate varying levels of floristic and functional recovery towards reference targets. Our findings illustrate that seemingly structurally-intact tropical rainforest fragments can remain arrested in a floristically degraded condition, and represent worthwhile targets for ecological restoration. Such forests expand opportunities for restoring conservation-priority and high carbonstoring species using relatively low-cost methods (e.g., enrichment planting), which can complement intensive restoration of highly degraded forests and minimally-assisted natural recovery of less-fragmented forests.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Phenological behaviour of selected tree species in tropical forests at Kodayar in the Western Ghats, Tamil Nadu, India
    Sundarapandian, SM
    Chandrasekaran, S
    Swamy, PS
    CURRENT SCIENCE, 2005, 88 (05): : 805 - 810
  • [22] Ant pollination of Syzygium occidentale, an endemic tree species of tropical rain forests of the Western Ghats, India
    Kuriakose, Giby
    Sinu, Palatty Allesh
    Shivanna, K. R.
    ARTHROPOD-PLANT INTERACTIONS, 2018, 12 (05) : 647 - 655
  • [23] Species diversity, regeneration and dominance as influenced by canopy gaps and their characteristics in tropical evergreen forests of Western Ghats, India
    Guddappa Mahalingappa Devagiri
    Anil Kumar Khaple
    Siddagangaiah Mohan
    Puttanaik Venkateshamurthy
    Sanjay Tomar
    Arkalgud Nagaraja Arunkumar
    Geeta Joshi
    Journal of Forestry Research, 2016, 27 (04) : 799 - 810
  • [24] Species diversity, regeneration and dominance as influenced by canopy gaps and their characteristics in tropical evergreen forests of Western Ghats, India
    Devagiri, Guddappa Mahalingappa
    Khaple, Anil Kumar
    Mohan, Siddagangaiah
    Venkateshamurthy, Puttanaik
    Tomar, Sanjay
    Arunkumar, Arkalgud Nagaraja
    Joshi, Geeta
    JOURNAL OF FORESTRY RESEARCH, 2016, 27 (04) : 799 - 810
  • [25] Species diversity, regeneration and dominance as influenced by canopy gaps and their characteristics in tropical evergreen forests of Western Ghats, India
    Guddappa Mahalingappa Devagiri
    Anil Kumar Khaple
    Siddagangaiah Mohan
    Puttanaik Venkateshamurthy
    Sanjay Tomar
    Arkalgud Nagaraja Arunkumar
    Geeta Joshi
    Journal of Forestry Research, 2016, 27 : 799 - 810
  • [26] IMPACT OF DISTURBANCE ON COMPOSITION, STRUCTURE, AND FLORISTICS OF TROPICAL MOIST FORESTS IN UTTARA KANNADA DISTRICT, WESTERN GHATS, INDIA
    Bhat, D. M.
    Hegde, G. T.
    Shetti, D. M.
    Patgar, S. G.
    Hegde, G. N.
    Furtado, R. M.
    Shastri, C. M.
    Bhat, P. R.
    Ravindranath, N. H.
    ECOTROPICA, 2011, 17 (02): : 1 - 14
  • [27] Four anamorphic fungi (with two new species) from forests of Western Ghats, India
    Pratibha, J.
    Bhat, D. J.
    Raghukumar, S.
    MYCOTAXON, 2011, 117 : 269 - 278
  • [28] Moisture Supply From the Western Ghats Forests to Water Deficit East Coast of India
    Paul, Supantha
    Ghosh, Subimal
    Rajendran, K.
    Murtugudde, Raghu
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2018, 45 (09) : 4337 - 4344
  • [29] Use of TanDEM-X PolInSAR for canopy height retrieval over tropical forests in the Western Ghats, India
    Raveendrakumar, Suchithra
    Khati, Unmesh
    Musthafa, Mohamed
    Singh, Gulab
    Tebaldini, Stefano
    FRONTIERS IN FORESTS AND GLOBAL CHANGE, 2022, 5
  • [30] Description of a new species of Colaxes Simon, 1900 (Araneae: Salticidae: Ballinae) from the tropical montane cloud forests of Western Ghats, India
    Paul, Jimmy
    Prajapati, Dhruv A.
    Joseph, Mathew M.
    Sebastian, Pothalil A.
    ARTHROPODA SELECTA, 2020, 29 (02): : 244 - 250