The changing ecology of tropical forests

被引:74
|
作者
Phillips, OL
机构
[1] School of Geography, University of Leeds
关键词
biodiversity; degradation; defaunation; fragmentation; climate change; carbon fertilization; increasing turnover; interactions; monitoring;
D O I
10.1023/A:1018352405482
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
The threat to tropical forests is often gauged in terms of deforestation rates and the total area remaining. Recently, however, there has been a growing realization that forest can appear intact on a satellite image yet be biologically degraded or vulnerable to degradation. The array of direct threats to humid tropical forest biodiversity, in addition to deforestation, includes: selective extraction of plants; selective extraction of animals, biological invasion; fragmentation; climate change; changing atmospheric composition; and increasing tree turnover rates. The threats are linked to one another by a poorly understood network of causality and feedback effects. Moreover, their potential impacts on forest biodiversity are hard to assess because each threat is as likely to precipitate indirect effects as direct effects, and because several threats are likely to interact synergistically with one another. In spite of the uncertainties, it is clear that the biological health of tropical forests can become seriously degraded as a result of these threats, and it is unlikely that any tropical forest will escape significant ecological changes. Some groups of plants and animals are likely to benefit at the expense of others. Species diversity is expected to decline as a consequence of the changes in forest ecology. In the 21st century scientists and conservationists will be increasingly challenged to monitor, understand, prevent and head off these threats.
引用
收藏
页码:291 / 311
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Biodiversity Monitoring in Changing Tropical Forests: A Review of Approaches and New Opportunities
    Mulatu, Kalkidan Ayele
    Mora, Brice
    Kooistra, Lammert
    Herold, Martin
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING, 2017, 9 (10)
  • [32] The political ecology of tropical forests in southeast Asia: Historical roots of modern problems
    de Jong, W
    Tuck-Po, L
    Ken-ichi, A
    [J]. POLITICAL ECOLOGY OF TROPICAL FORESTS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES, 2003, 6 : 1 - 28
  • [33] Fruiting and flushing phenology in Asian tropical and temperate forests: implications for primate ecology
    Hanya, Goro
    Tsuji, Yamato
    Grueter, Cyril C.
    [J]. PRIMATES, 2013, 54 (02) : 101 - 110
  • [34] Fruiting and flushing phenology in Asian tropical and temperate forests: implications for primate ecology
    Goro Hanya
    Yamato Tsuji
    Cyril C. Grueter
    [J]. Primates, 2013, 54 : 101 - 110
  • [35] Interrelationships between hydrology and ecology in fire degraded tropical peat swamp forests
    Wösten, JHM
    Van der Berg, J
    Van Eijk, P
    Gevers, GJM
    Giesen, WBJT
    Hooijer, A
    Idris, A
    Leenman, PH
    Rais, DS
    Siderius, C
    Silvius, MJ
    Suryadiputra, N
    Wibisono, IT
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT, 2006, 22 (01) : 157 - 174
  • [36] The political ecology of conserving tropical rain forests: A cross-national analysis
    Bates, D
    Rudel, TK
    [J]. SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES, 2000, 13 (07) : 619 - 634
  • [37] FRUIT DISPERSAL ECOLOGY OF WOODY TAXA IN TEMPERATE TO TROPICAL FORESTS OF CHINA AND JAPAN
    Knoerr, Ute C.
    Kovar-Eder, Johanna
    Mazouch, Petr
    Roth-Nebelsick, Anita
    [J]. PALAIOS, 2012, 27 (7-8) : 523 - 540
  • [39] CHANGING SCIENTIFIC PERCEPTIONS OF THE EASTERN TROPICAL RAIN-FORESTS - A PERSONAL VIEW
    WHITMORE, TC
    [J]. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY LETTERS, 1993, 3 (4-6): : 115 - 121
  • [40] Impact of the changing ecology on intertidal polychaetes in an anthropogenically stressed tropical creek, India
    Quadros, G.
    Sukumaran, Soniya
    Athalye, R. P.
    [J]. AQUATIC ECOLOGY, 2009, 43 (04) : 977 - 985