Search results for "Forest restoration"

showing 10 items of 20 documents

Past and Contemporary Changes in Forest Cover and Forest Continuity in Relation to Soils (Southern Latvia)

2014

A set of medium-scale historical maps was used to reconstruct changes in spatial patterns of forest area during the last 220 years in an agricultural matrix of northeastern Europe (Zemgale region, Latvia). Changes in total forest area by soils were determined, as well as the time period of continuous forest cover. Proportion of protected area for each soil trophic group was also calculated. Patterns of recent forest development differed between soil trophic groups. Afforestation occurred mainly on wet and poor soils in the 19th and 20th centuries, while the proportion of woodland area on fertile soils typical for nemoral forests was fairly stable. Only 1% of the fertile soil area has been c…

Forest floorgeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyEcologyAgroforestryWoodlandOld-growth forestForest restorationGeographyForest ecologySecondary forestAfforestationSoil fertilityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPolish Journal of Ecology
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Seventy-year changes in tree species composition and tree ages in state-owned forests in Latvia

2011

Abstract During the last 100 years, forest management in Latvia has gradually become more and more focused on industrial logging, which can be expected to have affected the tree species composition and age distribution across the landscape. These changes need to be considered in forest management and conservation of biological diversity. The aim of the study was to use forest records to reconstruct the tree species composition and age distribution in the North Vidzeme Biosphere Reserve in northern Latvia for the period, 1929–1941. These data were compared to a data-set from 2008, to determine the changes that transpired during a period of intensification of forest management. The silvicultu…

GeographyAgroforestryLoggingForest managementBiodiversityPeriod (geology)BiosphereForestryForestryEcological successionMonocultureForest restorationScandinavian Journal of Forest Research
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The preferences of saproxylic beetle species for different dead wood types created in forest restoration treatments

2010

Restoration by imitating natural disturbances is widely practised in boreal forests to increase the availability of habitats for specialized species. We studied the abundance and species richness of saproxylic beetles on different types of created dead wood during 2 years after restoration. The study was conducted on areas of a large-scale experiment in which Norway spruce ( Picea abies (L.) Karst.) forests were restored by controlled burning and partial harvesting with down wood retention in southern Finland. More beetle species were attracted to spruces than to birches and more species were attracted to burnt trees than to unburnt trees killed by girdling. Birch-living species consistent…

Global and Planetary ChangeEcologyHabitatEcologyAbundance (ecology)TaigaDead woodForestrySpecies richnessBiologyRestoration ecologyForest restorationCanadian Journal of Forest Research
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Functional ecological patterns and the effect of anthropogenic disturbances on a recently restored Mediterranean coastal lagoon. Needs for a sustaina…

2012

Abstract We present here a detailed case study on the lessons learned after a restoration process of a natural ecosystem, which can be considered as an ecological experiment. Senillar de Moraira is a brackish water small coastal lagoon located in the Spanish Mediterranean coast. It is separated from the sea by a sand bar and a beach, and is regularly fed by groundwater. Mostly due to the strong anthropogenic pressure this lagoon was degraded, and a restoration process, consisting mostly on the rebuilt of hydrogeomorphological features, was accomplished about a decade ago. After the restoration project, ecological monitoring was performed to reveal the recovery of the ecological integrity of…

OverexploitationEcological healthEcologyLand restorationSustainabilityDominance (ecology)Environmental scienceEcosystemAquatic ScienceOceanographyRestoration ecologyForest restorationEstuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
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Dynamic Animal Populations in Managed Forests: Species Ecological Requirements and Sustainable Harvesting

2015

Forest management has altered forested environments and provoked stress to many natural habitats and biodiversity. The goal of biodiversity management is the long-term persistence of populations in human-modified environments. We demonstrate a spatio-temporal modeling approach to address the relationship between various management objectives and population persistence in the long-term in a commercial forest landscape. We used the flying squirrel (Pteromys volans), the three-toed woodpecker (Picoides tridactylus) and the long-tailed tit (Aegithalos caudatus) as example species. They are all forest species but they have distinctly different habitat requirements. In the model, forest growth, f…

PopulationForest managementBiodiversityBiologyforest clearanceForest restorationForest ecologypopulation dynamicseducationIntact forest landscapepasserineEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationbiodiversityeducation.field_of_studygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorymodelEcologyEcologyAgroforestryhabitat availabilityrodentpersistenceharvestingOld-growth forestanimal communitynature-society relationsenvironmental stressSecondary forestta1181Animal Science and ZoologyAnnales Zoologici Fennici
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Priority areas for the conservation of Atlantic forest large mammals

2009

Large mammal faunas in tropical forest landscapes are widely affected by habitat fragmentation and hunting, yet the environmental determinants of their patterns of abundance remain poorly understood at large spatial scales. We analysed population abundance and biomass of 31 species of medium to large-bodied mammal species at 38 Atlantic forest sites (including three islands, 26 forest fragments and six continuous forest sites) as related to forest type, level of hunting pressure and forest fragment size using ANCOVAs. We also derived a novel measure of mammal conservation importance for each site based on a "Mammalian Conservation Priority index" (MPi) which incorporates information on spec…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaLine-transectgeography.geographical_feature_categorySettore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale E SelvicolturaForest fragmentationAgroforestryEcologyOld-growth forestEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicForest restorationGeographyHotspotDefaunationForest ecologyConservation statusSecondary forestSubsistence huntingSpecies richnessIntact forest landscapeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationWildlife conservationBiological Conservation
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Fish-seastar facilitation leads to algal forest restoration on protected rocky reefs

2015

AbstractAlthough protected areas can lead to recovery of overharvested species, it is much less clear whether the return of certain predator species or a diversity of predator species can lead to re-establishment of important top-down forces that regulate whole ecosystems. Here we report that the algal recovery in a Mediterranean Marine Protected Area did not derive from the increase in the traditional strong predators, but rather from the establishment of a previously unknown interaction between the thermophilic fish Thalassoma pavo and the seastar Marthasterias glacialis. The interaction resulted in elevated predation rates on sea urchins responsible for algal overgrazing. Manipulative ex…

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaMultidisciplinarybiologyEcologyPopulation DynamicsThalassoma pavoFishesbiology.organism_classificationBiooceanography Ecophysiology Evolutionary ecology Plant ecologyArticleForest restorationPredationFisheryChlorophytaPredatory BehaviorSea UrchinsAnimalsMarthasteriasMarine protected areaEcosystemTube feetPredatorEcosystemScientific Reports
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Conservation value of forest plantations for bird communities in western Kenya

2008

Tree plantations of native and exotic species are frequently used to compensate for forest loss in the tropics. However, these plantations may support lower species diversity and different communities than natural forest. We therefore investigated bird communities in stands of natural forest, different types of tree plantations and secondary forest in Kakamega Forest, western Kenya. We compared birds differing in habitat specialisation, i.e. forest specialists, generalists, and visitors. We recorded significant differences in mean species richness and number of individuals among the different forest types. Stands of natural forest and plantations of indigenous tree species comprised more sp…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAgroforestryForest managementForestryManagement Monitoring Policy and LawBiologyOld-growth forestForest restorationForest ecologySecondary forestSpecies richnessForest farmingIntact forest landscapeNature and Landscape ConservationForest Ecology and Management
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High seedling recruitment of indigenous tree species in forest plantations in Kakamega Forest, western Kenya

2009

Tree plantations are often used to compensate for the destruction and conversion of natural forests in the tropics. An important question is whether these plantations allow for the regeneration of indigenous tree species and are expected to transform into more natural forests in the future. To evaluate the potential of differently managed forest types for seedling recruitment of indigenous tree species we studied structural characteristics as well as tree and seedling communities in stands of natural forest, different types of tree plantations and secondary forest in Kakamega Forest, western Kenya. Forest types differed considerably in structural characteristics and tree composition with st…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAgroforestryForest managementForestryManagement Monitoring Policy and LawBiologyOld-growth forestForest restorationForest ecologySecondary forestSpecies richnessForest farmingNature and Landscape ConservationTropical rainforestForest Ecology and Management
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Exotic Guavas are Foci of Forest Regeneration in Kenyan Farmland

2007

Fruiting trees in degraded areas are attractive for frugivorous birds and may become centers of regeneration. However, a number of tree species in degraded areas are exotic species. Thus, the question arises whether these exotic species can also act as foci for forest regeneration. In the farmland adjacent to Kakamega Forest, Kenya, we investigated the frugivore assemblage in, and seed rain and seedling establishment under, 29 fruiting exotic guava trees (Psidium guajava) at different distances to the forest. The results show that 40 frugivorous bird species visited guava trees. All of the seed and 82 percent of the seedling species found under the treecrowns were animal dispersed, 58 and 5…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyAgroforestrySeed dispersalMyrtaceaeIntroduced speciesbiology.organism_classificationShrublandForest restorationFrugivoreRestoration ecologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsWoody plantBiotropica
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