| Literature DB >> 32778752 |
Andrew J Hansen1, Patrick Burns2, Jamison Ervin3, Scott J Goetz2, Matthew Hansen4, Oscar Venter5, James E M Watson6,7,8, Patrick A Jantz2, Anne L S Virnig3, Kevin Barnett9, Rajeev Pillay5, Scott Atkinson3, Christina Supples3, Susana Rodríguez-Buritica10, Dolors Armenteras11.
Abstract
Tropical forests vary in composition, structure and function such that not all forests have similar ecological value. This variability is caused by natural and anthropogenic disturbance regimes, which influence the ability of forests to support biodiversity, store carbon, mediate water yield and facilitate human well-being. While international environmental agreements mandate protecting and restoring forests, only forest extent is typically considered, while forest quality is ignored. Consequently, the locations and loss rates of forests of high ecological value are unknown and coordinated strategies for conserving these forests remain undeveloped. Here, we map locations high in forest structural integrity as a measure of ecological quality on the basis of recently developed fine-resolution maps of three-dimensional forest structure, integrated with human pressure across the global moist tropics. Our analyses reveal that tall forests with closed canopies and low human pressure typical of natural conditions comprise half of the global humid or moist tropical forest estate, largely limited to the Amazon and Congo basins. Most of these forests have no formal protection and, given recent rates of loss, are at substantial risk. With the rapid disappearance of these 'best of the last' forests at stake, we provide a policy-driven framework for their conservation and restoration, and recommend locations to maintain protections, add new protections, mitigate deleterious human impacts and restore forest structure.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32778752 PMCID: PMC7529876 DOI: 10.1038/s41559-020-1274-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Ecol Evol ISSN: 2397-334X Impact factor: 15.460
Figure 1.Distribution of forest types across the Tropical and Subtropical Moist Broadleaf Forest (TSMBF) Biome. Proportion of forest types in the biome is shown in the inset.
Figure 2.Extent of forest types within countries among the continents (A). Proportion of forest legally protected by forest type among the three continents (B). Loss rates by forest type during 2013–2018 (C).
Figure 3.Landscapes showing the distribution of three types of forest and locations of past forest lost during two time periods in the Amazon (top left) and Southeast Asia (top right). These maps illustrate that forest loss during 2013–2018 was located in close proximity to past forest lost (2001–2012) and was biased towards the Low SCI forest that surrounded this past development.
Figure 4.Recommended framework for conservation of tropical forests. Shown are four conservation strategies and associated criteria for mapping, tactics for management, and locations across the biome. Criteria include structural condition (SCI), human footprint (HFP), and protection status.