Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands

The persistent physical, chemical and biological limitations found in degraded forest lands create barriers to natural forest regeneration; an accurate assessment of these factors is key in determining which rehabilitation interventions will be necessary, based on the objectives of the intervention,...

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Autor principal: Sabogal, C.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: ITTO 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19329
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author Sabogal, C.
author_browse Sabogal, C.
author_facet Sabogal, C.
author_sort Sabogal, C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The persistent physical, chemical and biological limitations found in degraded forest lands create barriers to natural forest regeneration; an accurate assessment of these factors is key in determining which rehabilitation interventions will be necessary, based on the objectives of the intervention, the landscape context and the available resources. This chapter focuses primarily on open or denuded forest lands which have been invaded by weeds, and also covers degraded areas affected by soil and water erosion.The prioritization of degraded forest lands for rehabilitation should take into account the location and condition of these lands, the interests of the stakeholders concerned, and the availability of resources for the restoration work. Priority areas comprise degraded areas that are affecting local people’s livelihoods, are important for biodiversity, and/or are causing environmental problems such as a decline in ecological functions. Thus, degraded areas on farmlands, areas of special ecological value, or areas that have been subjected to intensive extractive uses (such as mining) would all constitute priority areas for restoration. This chapter describes four strategies for the rehabilitation of degraded forest lands: protective measures; measures to accelerate natural recovery; measures to assist natural regeneration; and tree-planting. In addition, the application of agroforestry may be considered a fifth strategy for these areas. This strategy is dealt with in Chapter 12.
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spelling CGSpace193292025-01-24T14:20:53Z Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands Sabogal, C. tropical rain forests degraded land degraded forests landscape ecology rehabilitation weeds erosion water erosion natural regeneration planting terminology planning The persistent physical, chemical and biological limitations found in degraded forest lands create barriers to natural forest regeneration; an accurate assessment of these factors is key in determining which rehabilitation interventions will be necessary, based on the objectives of the intervention, the landscape context and the available resources. This chapter focuses primarily on open or denuded forest lands which have been invaded by weeds, and also covers degraded areas affected by soil and water erosion.The prioritization of degraded forest lands for rehabilitation should take into account the location and condition of these lands, the interests of the stakeholders concerned, and the availability of resources for the restoration work. Priority areas comprise degraded areas that are affecting local people’s livelihoods, are important for biodiversity, and/or are causing environmental problems such as a decline in ecological functions. Thus, degraded areas on farmlands, areas of special ecological value, or areas that have been subjected to intensive extractive uses (such as mining) would all constitute priority areas for restoration. This chapter describes four strategies for the rehabilitation of degraded forest lands: protective measures; measures to accelerate natural recovery; measures to assist natural regeneration; and tree-planting. In addition, the application of agroforestry may be considered a fifth strategy for these areas. This strategy is dealt with in Chapter 12. 2005 2012-06-04T09:09:20Z 2012-06-04T09:09:20Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19329 en ITTO Sabogal, C. 2005. Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands . ITTO Technical Series No.23. In: International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO). Restoring forest landscapes: an introduction to the art and science of forest landscape restoration. :101-108. Tokyo, Japan, ITTO. ISBN: 4-902045-23-0..
spellingShingle tropical rain forests
degraded land
degraded forests
landscape ecology
rehabilitation
weeds
erosion
water erosion
natural regeneration
planting
terminology
planning
Sabogal, C.
Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands
title Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands
title_full Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands
title_fullStr Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands
title_full_unstemmed Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands
title_short Site-level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands
title_sort site level rehabilitation strategies for degraded forest lands
topic tropical rain forests
degraded land
degraded forests
landscape ecology
rehabilitation
weeds
erosion
water erosion
natural regeneration
planting
terminology
planning
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19329
work_keys_str_mv AT sabogalc sitelevelrehabilitationstrategiesfordegradedforestlands