Maintaining ecosystem function and services in logged tropical forests

Share this
Vast expanses of tropical forests worldwide are being impacted by selective logging. We evaluate the environmental impacts of such logging and conclude that natural timber-production forests typically retain most of their biodiversity and associated ecosystem functions, as well as their carbon, climatic, and soil-hydrological ecosystem services. Unfortunately, the value of production forests is often overlooked, leaving them vulnerable to further degradation including post-logging clearing, fires, and hunting. Because logged tropical forests are extensive, functionally diverse, and provide many ecosystem services, efforts to expand their role in conservation strategies are urgently needed. Key priorities include improving harvest practices to reduce negative impacts on ecosystem functions and services, and preventing the rapid conversion and loss of logged forests. View source
Year

2014

Secondary Title

Trends in Ecology & Evolution

Volume

29

Number

9

Pages

511-520

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2014.07.003

Language

Keyword(s)

rain-forest, oil palm, biodiversity conservation, southeast-asia, ecological restoration, understory birds, air passage, impact, management, disturbance, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, Genetics &, Heredity

Classification
Form: Journal Article

Supporter & Funder