The content presents findings from a comprehensive assessment of the impact of logging intensity on the occurrence patterns of 1,681 taxa across 86 taxonomic orders and 126 functional groups in the tropical forests of Sabah, Malaysia. The key insights are:
Lightly logged forests (with less than 29% biomass removal) retain high conservation value and largely intact functional composition, and are likely to recover their pre-logging values through natural regeneration.
Heavily degraded forests (with more than two-thirds, or 68%, of their biomass removed) experience the most extreme impacts and will likely require more intensive measures to recover their biodiversity value.
The findings reinforce that primary forests are irreplaceable, but also highlight the considerable conservation value of logged forests that should not be overlooked. The empirically defined thresholds provide a framework for categorizing the conservation status of logged and disturbed tropical forests.
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by Robert M. Ew... 場所 www.nature.com 07-17-2024
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07657-w深掘り質問