Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits

Selective logging applied in tropical forests is based on one universal criterion: a minimum diameter cutting limit for all commercial timber species. Minimum diameter cutting limits in mixed dipterocarp forests of the Malesia region lead to high felling intensities (10–20+ trees per hectare). Such...

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Autores principales: Sist, P., Fimbel, R., Sheil, Douglas, Nasi, Robert, Chevallier, M.H.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18858
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author Sist, P.
Fimbel, R.
Sheil, Douglas
Nasi, Robert
Chevallier, M.H.
author_browse Chevallier, M.H.
Fimbel, R.
Nasi, Robert
Sheil, Douglas
Sist, P.
author_facet Sist, P.
Fimbel, R.
Sheil, Douglas
Nasi, Robert
Chevallier, M.H.
author_sort Sist, P.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Selective logging applied in tropical forests is based on one universal criterion: a minimum diameter cutting limit for all commercial timber species. Minimum diameter cutting limits in mixed dipterocarp forests of the Malesia region lead to high felling intensities (10–20+ trees per hectare). Such extraction rates create massive stand damage (>50% of the remaining tree population), which has a negative impact on the regeneration and growth of many harvested dipterocarp species. As such, the minimum diameter cutting limit approach is seldom compatible with sustainable forest management. Where basic ecological characteristics of the commercial species are considered in timber harvesting prescriptions, mixed dipterocarp forests appear capable of sustained timber yields, habitat conservation, and providing other goods and services. This paper first presents the main silvicultural systems developed in mixed dipterocarp forests of Western Malesia and then reviews current knowledge of dipterocarp biology to finally develop guidelines aimed at improving the ecological sustainability of production forests of Western Malesia. These guidelines, a pragmatic reflection of science and ‘best guess’ judgement, include: (1) integration of reduced-impact logging practices into normal management operations; (2) cutting of eight trees per hectare or less (with a felling cycle of 40–60 years to be determined according to local conditions); (3) defining minimum diameter cutting limits according to the structure, density and diameter at reproduction of target species; (4) avoiding harvesting species with less than one adult tree per hectare (diameter at breast height [dbh] larger and equal to 50cm over an area of 50–100 ha); (5) minimizing the size and connectivity of gaps (<600m2 whenever possible); (6) refraining from treatments such as understorey clearing; and (7) providing explicit protection for key forest species and the ecological processes they perform. Further refinement is encouraged to allow for local conditions, and for other forest types.
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spelling CGSpace188582025-01-24T14:12:12Z Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits Sist, P. Fimbel, R. Sheil, Douglas Nasi, Robert Chevallier, M.H. dipterocarpaceae logging silvicultural systems biology mixed forests forest trees forest ecology diversity Selective logging applied in tropical forests is based on one universal criterion: a minimum diameter cutting limit for all commercial timber species. Minimum diameter cutting limits in mixed dipterocarp forests of the Malesia region lead to high felling intensities (10–20+ trees per hectare). Such extraction rates create massive stand damage (>50% of the remaining tree population), which has a negative impact on the regeneration and growth of many harvested dipterocarp species. As such, the minimum diameter cutting limit approach is seldom compatible with sustainable forest management. Where basic ecological characteristics of the commercial species are considered in timber harvesting prescriptions, mixed dipterocarp forests appear capable of sustained timber yields, habitat conservation, and providing other goods and services. This paper first presents the main silvicultural systems developed in mixed dipterocarp forests of Western Malesia and then reviews current knowledge of dipterocarp biology to finally develop guidelines aimed at improving the ecological sustainability of production forests of Western Malesia. These guidelines, a pragmatic reflection of science and ‘best guess’ judgement, include: (1) integration of reduced-impact logging practices into normal management operations; (2) cutting of eight trees per hectare or less (with a felling cycle of 40–60 years to be determined according to local conditions); (3) defining minimum diameter cutting limits according to the structure, density and diameter at reproduction of target species; (4) avoiding harvesting species with less than one adult tree per hectare (diameter at breast height [dbh] larger and equal to 50cm over an area of 50–100 ha); (5) minimizing the size and connectivity of gaps (<600m2 whenever possible); (6) refraining from treatments such as understorey clearing; and (7) providing explicit protection for key forest species and the ecological processes they perform. Further refinement is encouraged to allow for local conditions, and for other forest types. 2003 2012-06-04T09:08:53Z 2012-06-04T09:08:53Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18858 en Sist, P., Fimbel, R., Sheil, D., Nasi, R., Chevallier, M-H. 2003. Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits . Environmental Conservation 30 (4) :364-374. ISSN: 0376-8929.
spellingShingle dipterocarpaceae
logging
silvicultural systems
biology
mixed forests
forest trees
forest ecology
diversity
Sist, P.
Fimbel, R.
Sheil, Douglas
Nasi, Robert
Chevallier, M.H.
Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits
title Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits
title_full Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits
title_fullStr Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits
title_full_unstemmed Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits
title_short Towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of South-east Asia: moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits
title_sort towards sustainable management of mixed dipterocarp forests of south east asia moving beyond minimum diameter cutting limits
topic dipterocarpaceae
logging
silvicultural systems
biology
mixed forests
forest trees
forest ecology
diversity
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18858
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