Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests?

A literature survey was conducted to assess animal responses to logging and evaluate the usefulness of bioindicators as tools to assess biodiversity conservation in logged tropical forests. The survey indicated that studies on the impact of logging on arthropods and herpetofauna are under-represente...

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Autores principales: Azevedo-Ramos, C., Carvalho, O. de, Nasi, Robert
Formato: Libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazonia (IPAM) 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19382
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author Azevedo-Ramos, C.
Carvalho, O. de
Nasi, Robert
author_browse Azevedo-Ramos, C.
Carvalho, O. de
Nasi, Robert
author_facet Azevedo-Ramos, C.
Carvalho, O. de
Nasi, Robert
author_sort Azevedo-Ramos, C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A literature survey was conducted to assess animal responses to logging and evaluate the usefulness of bioindicators as tools to assess biodiversity conservation in logged tropical forests. The survey indicated that studies on the impact of logging on arthropods and herpetofauna are under-represented. Mammals are the main subject of studies addressing the effect of logging on fauna. Overall, logging does have an effect on some animals but the responses varied between and within animal groups. Additionally, most of the studies conducted so far vary greatly in the forest structures, taxa, methodologies, and logging intensities and histories of the study site, resulting in a lack of comparability among papers. Few studies have investigated linkages between changes in the composition of animal groups and the functional significance of these changes, nor have they correlated responses with environmental changes after logging, complicating determination of cause-effect relationships. Further difficulties were taxonomical complexity, the small number of trained people, the costs of monitoring population trends, the lack of information on the relations between changes in different groups, and the lack of congruence between traditional scales of research (plots) and appropriate scales of land management. The sum of these difficulties suggests that until now animal indicators for monitoring biodiversity conservation in logging operations may be ineffective to implement in forest managements. In this context, indicator development continues to be a critical research need in forest ecology. However, it is good to keep in mind that in management systems, where changes are usually inevitable and most of time desirable, proposed indicators would actually be doing their role of early warning when facilitating the assessment of the acceptable degree of habitat modification. Until there, more broadly inventories are still needed to assess biodiversity status in logging operations.
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spelling CGSpace193822025-01-24T14:12:28Z Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests? Azevedo-Ramos, C. Carvalho, O. de Nasi, Robert animals fauna logging biodiversity conservation indicators assessment forest ecology A literature survey was conducted to assess animal responses to logging and evaluate the usefulness of bioindicators as tools to assess biodiversity conservation in logged tropical forests. The survey indicated that studies on the impact of logging on arthropods and herpetofauna are under-represented. Mammals are the main subject of studies addressing the effect of logging on fauna. Overall, logging does have an effect on some animals but the responses varied between and within animal groups. Additionally, most of the studies conducted so far vary greatly in the forest structures, taxa, methodologies, and logging intensities and histories of the study site, resulting in a lack of comparability among papers. Few studies have investigated linkages between changes in the composition of animal groups and the functional significance of these changes, nor have they correlated responses with environmental changes after logging, complicating determination of cause-effect relationships. Further difficulties were taxonomical complexity, the small number of trained people, the costs of monitoring population trends, the lack of information on the relations between changes in different groups, and the lack of congruence between traditional scales of research (plots) and appropriate scales of land management. The sum of these difficulties suggests that until now animal indicators for monitoring biodiversity conservation in logging operations may be ineffective to implement in forest managements. In this context, indicator development continues to be a critical research need in forest ecology. However, it is good to keep in mind that in management systems, where changes are usually inevitable and most of time desirable, proposed indicators would actually be doing their role of early warning when facilitating the assessment of the acceptable degree of habitat modification. Until there, more broadly inventories are still needed to assess biodiversity status in logging operations. 2005 2012-06-04T09:09:24Z 2012-06-04T09:09:24Z Book https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19382 en Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazonia (IPAM) Azevedo-Ramos, C., de Carvalho, O, Jr., Nasi, R. 2005. Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests? . Belem, Brazil, Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazonia (IPAM). 68p.
spellingShingle animals
fauna
logging
biodiversity
conservation
indicators
assessment
forest ecology
Azevedo-Ramos, C.
Carvalho, O. de
Nasi, Robert
Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests?
title Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests?
title_full Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests?
title_fullStr Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests?
title_full_unstemmed Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests?
title_short Animal indicators: a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests?
title_sort animal indicators a tool to assess biotic integrity after logging tropical forests
topic animals
fauna
logging
biodiversity
conservation
indicators
assessment
forest ecology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19382
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