TY - JOUR
T1 - Landscape-scale forest cover drives the predictability of forest regeneration across the Neotropics
AU - Arroyo-Rodríguez, Víctor
AU - Rito, Kátia F.
AU - Farfán, Michelle
AU - Navía, Iván C.
AU - Mora, Francisco
AU - Arreola-Villa, Felipe
AU - Balvanera, Patricia
AU - Bongers, Frans
AU - Castellanos-Castro, Carolina
AU - Catharino, Eduardo L.M.
AU - Chazdon, Robin L.
AU - Dupuy-Rada, Juan M.
AU - Ferguson, Bruce G.
AU - Foster, Paul F.
AU - González-Valdivia, Noel
AU - Griffith, Daniel M.
AU - Hernández-Stefanoni, José L.
AU - Jakovac, Catarina C.
AU - Junqueira, André B.
AU - Jong, Bernardus H.J.
AU - Letcher, Susan G.
AU - May-Pat, Filogonio
AU - Meave, Jorge A.
AU - Ochoa-Gaona, Susana
AU - Meirelles, Gabriela S.
AU - Muñiz-Castro, Miguel A.
AU - Muñoz, Rodrigo
AU - Powers, Jennifer S.
AU - Rocha, Gustavo P.E.
AU - Rosário, Ricardo P.G.
AU - Santos, Bráulio A.
AU - Simon, Marcelo F.
AU - Tabarelli, Marcelo
AU - Tun-Dzul, Fernando
AU - van den Berg, Eduardo
AU - Vieira, Daniel L.M.
AU - Williams-Linera, Guadalupe
AU - Martínez-Ramos, Miguel
N1 - Funding Information:
K.F.R. thanks DGAPA-UNAM for her postdoctoral scholarship. R.L.C. thanks the Andrew Mellon Foundation, US NSF awards 0424767, 0639393, 1147429 and 1110722, UConn Research Foundation, and NASA ROSES Grant NNH08ZDA001N-TE. P.B. thanks the funding provided by SEP-CONACYT (CB-2009-128136 and CB 2015- 255544) and PAPIIT-UNAM (projects 218416, 211114 and IN212617). J.L.H.-S., J.M.D.-R., F.M.-P. and F.T.-D. thank the funding provided by FOMIX-Yucatán (grant no. YUC-2008-C06-108863). D.M.G., B.G.F and P.F.F. thank the funding provided by NSF grant 9815369. K. Eastwood made valuable recommendations on the first draft.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/1/11
Y1 - 2023/1/11
N2 - Abandonment of agricultural lands promotes the global expansion of secondary forests, which are critical for preserving biodiversity and ecosystem functions and services. Such roles largely depend, however, on two essential successional attributes, trajectory and recovery rate, which are expected to depend on landscape-scale forest cover in nonlinear ways. Using a multi-scale approach and a large vegetation dataset (843 plots, 3511 tree species) from 22 secondary forest chronosequences distributed across the Neotropics, we show that successional trajectories of woody plant species richness, stem density and basal area are less predictable in landscapes (4 km radius) with intermediate (40–60%) forest cover than in landscapes with high (greater than 60%) forest cover. This supports theory suggesting that high spatial and environmental heterogeneity in intermediately deforested landscapes can increase the variation of key ecological factors for forest recovery (e.g. seed dispersal and seedling recruitment), increasing the uncertainty of successional trajectories. Regarding the recovery rate, only species richness is positively related to forest cover in relatively small (1 km radius) landscapes. These findings highlight the importance of using a spatially explicit landscape approach in restoration initiatives and suggest that these initiatives can be more effective in more forested landscapes, especially if implemented across spatial extents of 1–4 km radius.
AB - Abandonment of agricultural lands promotes the global expansion of secondary forests, which are critical for preserving biodiversity and ecosystem functions and services. Such roles largely depend, however, on two essential successional attributes, trajectory and recovery rate, which are expected to depend on landscape-scale forest cover in nonlinear ways. Using a multi-scale approach and a large vegetation dataset (843 plots, 3511 tree species) from 22 secondary forest chronosequences distributed across the Neotropics, we show that successional trajectories of woody plant species richness, stem density and basal area are less predictable in landscapes (4 km radius) with intermediate (40–60%) forest cover than in landscapes with high (greater than 60%) forest cover. This supports theory suggesting that high spatial and environmental heterogeneity in intermediately deforested landscapes can increase the variation of key ecological factors for forest recovery (e.g. seed dispersal and seedling recruitment), increasing the uncertainty of successional trajectories. Regarding the recovery rate, only species richness is positively related to forest cover in relatively small (1 km radius) landscapes. These findings highlight the importance of using a spatially explicit landscape approach in restoration initiatives and suggest that these initiatives can be more effective in more forested landscapes, especially if implemented across spatial extents of 1–4 km radius.
KW - deforestation
KW - landscape heterogeneity
KW - recovery rate
KW - secondary forests
KW - successional trajectories
KW - uncertainty
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U2 - 10.1098/rspb.2022.2203
DO - 10.1098/rspb.2022.2203
M3 - Article
C2 - 36629117
AN - SCOPUS:85146107482
SN - 0962-8452
VL - 290
JO - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
JF - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
IS - 1990
M1 - 20222203
ER -