Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests

The most important timber species in Neotropics, mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) is still harvested from natural forests. The difficulty of ensuring its regeneration in logged-over forests was a primary reason for listing this species in CITES appendix II in 2003, requiring producer countries to de...

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Autor principal: Snook, Laura K.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19306
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author Snook, Laura K.
author_browse Snook, Laura K.
author_facet Snook, Laura K.
author_sort Snook, Laura K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The most important timber species in Neotropics, mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) is still harvested from natural forests. The difficulty of ensuring its regeneration in logged-over forests was a primary reason for listing this species in CITES appendix II in 2003, requiring producer countries to develop sustainable production systems. The most advanced efforts are those of communities that harvest multiple products, including more than 8000 m cubic/year of mahogany timber, from all over nearly 730 000 hectares of production forests on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula. Over the past twenty years, their foresters have developed inventories and managment plans and overseen enrichment planting efforts, while researchers have established experiments and studies to evaluate management alternatives. Seven years of research on mahogani regeneration has revealed that mahogany trees with diameters superior to 75 cm are the most important seed producers, but selective harvesting of all trees over the minimum diameter limit of 55 cm is depleting them. Silvicultural experiments on different sizes of clearings have shown that 5 000 square m clearings produced by machinery or burning, treatments which impede resprouting by trees of other species, were most favorable, to establishment and growth of mahogany seedlings. Seedlings did not survive when planted under the forest canopy. Researchers, foresters, government agencies, and communities have been collaborating to integrate these new findings into revised management guidelines and to modify forestry policies accordingly. These findings are likely to be applicable to the management of this species elsewhere in its native range, and possibly also to the closely related African mahoganies.
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spelling CGSpace193062025-01-24T14:12:54Z Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests Snook, Laura K. swietenia macrophylla silviculture research community forestry forest management natural forests The most important timber species in Neotropics, mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) is still harvested from natural forests. The difficulty of ensuring its regeneration in logged-over forests was a primary reason for listing this species in CITES appendix II in 2003, requiring producer countries to develop sustainable production systems. The most advanced efforts are those of communities that harvest multiple products, including more than 8000 m cubic/year of mahogany timber, from all over nearly 730 000 hectares of production forests on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula. Over the past twenty years, their foresters have developed inventories and managment plans and overseen enrichment planting efforts, while researchers have established experiments and studies to evaluate management alternatives. Seven years of research on mahogani regeneration has revealed that mahogany trees with diameters superior to 75 cm are the most important seed producers, but selective harvesting of all trees over the minimum diameter limit of 55 cm is depleting them. Silvicultural experiments on different sizes of clearings have shown that 5 000 square m clearings produced by machinery or burning, treatments which impede resprouting by trees of other species, were most favorable, to establishment and growth of mahogany seedlings. Seedlings did not survive when planted under the forest canopy. Researchers, foresters, government agencies, and communities have been collaborating to integrate these new findings into revised management guidelines and to modify forestry policies accordingly. These findings are likely to be applicable to the management of this species elsewhere in its native range, and possibly also to the closely related African mahoganies. 2005 2012-06-04T09:09:19Z 2012-06-04T09:09:19Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19306 en Snook, L.K. 2005. Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests . Bois et Forets des Tropiques 285 (3) :55-65. ISSN: 0006-579X.
spellingShingle swietenia macrophylla
silviculture
research
community forestry
forest management
natural forests
Snook, Laura K.
Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests
title Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests
title_full Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests
title_fullStr Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests
title_full_unstemmed Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests
title_short Sustaining mahogany: research and silviculture in Mexico's community forests
title_sort sustaining mahogany research and silviculture in mexico s community forests
topic swietenia macrophylla
silviculture
research
community forestry
forest management
natural forests
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19306
work_keys_str_mv AT snooklaurak sustainingmahoganyresearchandsilvicultureinmexicoscommunityforests