Humans have been hunting wildlife in tropical forests for over 100 000 years, but the extent of consumption has greatly increased over the last few decades. Tropical forest species are hunted for local consumption or sales in distant markets as food, trophies, medicines and pets. Exploitation of wild meat by forest dwellers has increased due to changes in hunting ...
Tropical deforestation is driven primarily by frontier expansion of subsistence agriculture and large development programs involving resettlement, agriculture, and infrastructure. However, animal and plant population declines are typically pre-empted by hunting and logging activity well before the coup de grâce of deforestation is delivered. It is estimated that between 5 and 7 million hectares of tropical forests are logged ...
Small populations are vulnerable to local extinction, but a species has a greater likelihood of persistence where there are a number of local populations interconnected by occasional movements of individuals among them. Such a set of subdivided populations is often termed a “meta population” (Hanski 1999). Two main kinds of meta population have been described. A mainland-island model is ...
“Mobile links” are animal species that provide critical ecosystem services and increase ecosystem resilience by connecting habitats and ecosystems as they move between them (Gilbert 1980; Lundberg and Moberg 2003;). Mobile links are crucial for maintaining ecosystem function, memory, and resilience (Nystrm and Folke 2001). The three main types of mobile links: genetic, process, and resource links (Lundberg and ...
In an increasingly human-dominated world, where most of us seem oblivious to the liquidation of Earth’s natural resource capital, exploitation of biological populations has become one of the most important threats to the persistence of global biodiversity. Many regional economies, if not entire civilizations, have been built on free-for-all extractive industries, and history is littered with examples of boom ...
Our rapacious appetite for both renewable and non - renewable resources has grown exponentially from our humble beginnings—when early humans exerted an ecological footprint no larger than that of other large omnivorous mammals— to currently one of the main driving forces in reorganizing the structure of many ecosystems. Humans have subsisted on wild plants and animals since the earliest ...
Removal of large tracts of native vegetation changes physical processes, such as those relating to solar radiation and the fluxes of wind and water (Saunders et al. 1991). The greatest impact on fragments occurs at their boundaries; small remnants and those with complex shapes experience the strongest “edge effects”. For example, the micro climate at a forest edge adjacent ...
For many taxa birds, butterflies, rodents, reptiles, vascular plants, and more species richness in habitat fragments is positively correlated with fragment size. This is widely known as the species-area relationship. Thus, when habitats are fragmented into smaller pieces, species are lost; and the likely extent of this loss can be predicted from the species-area relationship. Further, species richness in ...
A second way to assess habitat loss is by contrastingmajor biomes or ecosystem types. Today, tropical rainforests (also termed tropical moist and humid forests) are receiving the greatest attention, because they are being destroyed so rapidly and because they are the most biologically diverse of all terrestrial biomes. Of the roughly 16 million km2 of tropical rainforest that originally ...
Some regions of the Earth are far more affected by habitat destruction than others. Among the most imperiled are the so-called “biodiversity hotspots”, which contain high species diversity, many locally endemic species (those whose entire geographic range is confined to a small area), and which have lost at least 70% of their native vegetation (Myers et al. 2000). Many ...
Ecosystems and their constituent species provide an endless stream of products, functions, and services that keep our world running and make our existence possible. To many, even the thought of putting a price tag on services like photosynthesis, purification of water, and pollination of food crops may seem like hubris, as these are truly priceless services without which not ...
Many studies have described the occurrence of species in fragments of different sizes, shapes, composition, land-use and context in the landscape. For species that primarily depend on fragmented habitat, particularly animals, fragment size is a key influence on the likelihood of occurrence. As fragment size decreases, the frequency of occurrence declines and the species may be absent from many ...
The role of biodiversity in providing ecosystem services is actively debated in ecology. The diversity of functional groups (groups of ecologically equivalent species (Naeem and Li 1997)), is as important as species diversity, if not more so (Kremen 2005), and in most services a few dominant species seem to play the major role (Hooper et al. 2005). However, many ...
Interactions between species, such as predation, competition, parasitism, and an array of mutualisms, have a profound influence on the structure of communities. The loss of a species or a change in its abundance, particularly for species that interact with many others, can have a marked effect on ecological processes throughout fragmentedlandscapes. Changes to predator-prey relationships, for example, have been ...
The size of any population is determined by the balance between four parameters: births, deaths, immigration, and emigration. Population size is increased by births and immigration of individuals, while deaths and emigration of individuals reduce population size. In fragmented landscapes, these population parameters are influenced by several categories of processes. Deterministic processes Many factors that affect populations in fragmented ...
While many people know about how plants prevent erosion, protect water supplies, and “clean the air”, how bees pollinate plants or how owls reduce rodent activity, many lesser-known organisms not only have crucial ecological roles, but also produce unique chemicals and pharmaceuticals that can literally save people’s lives. Thousands of plant species are used medically by traditional, indigenous communities ...
The theory of island bio geography (MacArthur and Wilson 1967) had a seminal influence in stimulating ecological and conservation interest in fragmented landscapes. This simple, elegant model highlighted the relationship between the number of species on an island and the island’s area and isolation. It predicted that species richness on an island represents a dynamic balance between the rate ...
Timber extraction in tropical forests is widely variable in terms of species selectivity, but even highly selective logging can trigger major ecological changes in the understory light environment, forest microclimate, and dynamics of plant regeneration. Even reduced-impact logging (RIL) operations can generate enough forest disturbance, through elevated canopy gap fracture, to greatly augment forest understory desiccation, dry fuel loads, ...
Humans have transformed a large fraction of the Earth’s land surface. Over the past three centuries, the global extent of cropland has risen sharply, from around 2.7 to 15 million km2, mostly at the expense of forest habitats (Turner et al. 1990). Permanent pasture lands are even more extensive, reaching around 34 million km2 by the mid-1990s (Wood et ...
Non-timber forest products (NTFPs) are biological resources other than timber which are extracted from either natural or managed forests (Peters 1994). Examples of exploited plant products include fruits, nuts, oil seeds, latex, resins, gums, medicinal plants, spices, dyes, ornamental plants, and raw materials such as firewood, Desmoncus climbing palms, bamboo and rattan. The socio-economic importance of NTFP harvest to ...