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Amazonian secondary forests are greatly reducing fragmentation and edge exposure in old-growth forests

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Amazonian secondary forests are greatly reducing fragmentation and edge exposure in old-growth forests. / Smith, Charlotte C; Barlow, Jos; Healey, John R et al.
In: Environmental Research Letters, Vol. 18, No. 12, 09.11.2023.

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Smith CC, Barlow J, Healey JR, Miranda LDS, Young PJ, Schwartz NB. Amazonian secondary forests are greatly reducing fragmentation and edge exposure in old-growth forests. Environmental Research Letters. 2023 Nov 9;18(12). doi: 10.1088/1748-9326/ad039e

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@article{cb9f4162ce5a4fa4aa4fb1f255a7eb95,
title = "Amazonian secondary forests are greatly reducing fragmentation and edge exposure in old-growth forests",
abstract = "Restoration of tropical landscapes through the expansion of secondary forests is crucial for climate change mitigation and offers co-benefits for biodiversity. However, the strength of these benefits is influenced by the position of these secondary forests within the landscape. Recovery of both carbon stocks and biodiversity recovery in secondary forests are enhanced by proximity to old-growth forests, and old-growth forests may benefit from secondary forests in return through buffering of edge effects and reduced fragmentation. However, to date there has been no biome-wide assessment of secondary forest location relative to old-growth forests. We mapped Amazonian secondary forests and explored their proximity to old-growth forests of different conditions. We then calculated the extent to which secondary forests buffer old-growth edge forest (<120m from an edge) and the influence of secondary forests on fragmentation. In 2020, 41.2% of Amazonian secondary forest was directly adjacent to old-growth forest and 94.1% was within a fragment connected to old growth. However, adjacency and connectedness fell to 20.1% and 57.4% respectively when only considering extensive structurally intact old-growth forest. Secondary forests buffered 41.1% of old-growth edge forest and, when acting as corridors, reduced the total number of old-growth fragments by 2 million. Our results reveal the importance of understanding spatial context when examining the potential benefits of increasing secondary forest cover. A greater understanding of the benefits of locating secondary forests next to old-growth forests could support the development of more effective climate change mitigation and restoration strategies.",
keywords = "amazon, edge effects, restoration, secondary forest",
author = "Smith, {Charlotte C} and Jos Barlow and Healey, {John R} and Miranda, {Leonardo de Sousa} and Young, {Paul J.} and Schwartz, {Naomi B}",
year = "2023",
month = nov,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1088/1748-9326/ad039e",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
journal = "Environmental Research Letters",
issn = "1748-9326",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Amazonian secondary forests are greatly reducing fragmentation and edge exposure in old-growth forests

AU - Smith, Charlotte C

AU - Barlow, Jos

AU - Healey, John R

AU - Miranda, Leonardo de Sousa

AU - Young, Paul J.

AU - Schwartz, Naomi B

PY - 2023/11/9

Y1 - 2023/11/9

N2 - Restoration of tropical landscapes through the expansion of secondary forests is crucial for climate change mitigation and offers co-benefits for biodiversity. However, the strength of these benefits is influenced by the position of these secondary forests within the landscape. Recovery of both carbon stocks and biodiversity recovery in secondary forests are enhanced by proximity to old-growth forests, and old-growth forests may benefit from secondary forests in return through buffering of edge effects and reduced fragmentation. However, to date there has been no biome-wide assessment of secondary forest location relative to old-growth forests. We mapped Amazonian secondary forests and explored their proximity to old-growth forests of different conditions. We then calculated the extent to which secondary forests buffer old-growth edge forest (<120m from an edge) and the influence of secondary forests on fragmentation. In 2020, 41.2% of Amazonian secondary forest was directly adjacent to old-growth forest and 94.1% was within a fragment connected to old growth. However, adjacency and connectedness fell to 20.1% and 57.4% respectively when only considering extensive structurally intact old-growth forest. Secondary forests buffered 41.1% of old-growth edge forest and, when acting as corridors, reduced the total number of old-growth fragments by 2 million. Our results reveal the importance of understanding spatial context when examining the potential benefits of increasing secondary forest cover. A greater understanding of the benefits of locating secondary forests next to old-growth forests could support the development of more effective climate change mitigation and restoration strategies.

AB - Restoration of tropical landscapes through the expansion of secondary forests is crucial for climate change mitigation and offers co-benefits for biodiversity. However, the strength of these benefits is influenced by the position of these secondary forests within the landscape. Recovery of both carbon stocks and biodiversity recovery in secondary forests are enhanced by proximity to old-growth forests, and old-growth forests may benefit from secondary forests in return through buffering of edge effects and reduced fragmentation. However, to date there has been no biome-wide assessment of secondary forest location relative to old-growth forests. We mapped Amazonian secondary forests and explored their proximity to old-growth forests of different conditions. We then calculated the extent to which secondary forests buffer old-growth edge forest (<120m from an edge) and the influence of secondary forests on fragmentation. In 2020, 41.2% of Amazonian secondary forest was directly adjacent to old-growth forest and 94.1% was within a fragment connected to old growth. However, adjacency and connectedness fell to 20.1% and 57.4% respectively when only considering extensive structurally intact old-growth forest. Secondary forests buffered 41.1% of old-growth edge forest and, when acting as corridors, reduced the total number of old-growth fragments by 2 million. Our results reveal the importance of understanding spatial context when examining the potential benefits of increasing secondary forest cover. A greater understanding of the benefits of locating secondary forests next to old-growth forests could support the development of more effective climate change mitigation and restoration strategies.

KW - amazon

KW - edge effects

KW - restoration

KW - secondary forest

U2 - 10.1088/1748-9326/ad039e

DO - 10.1088/1748-9326/ad039e

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

JO - Environmental Research Letters

JF - Environmental Research Letters

SN - 1748-9326

IS - 12

ER -