Instituto de Investigaciones en Ecosistemas y Sustentabilidad, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Antigua Carretera a Patzcuaro 8701, Ex-hacienda de San Jose de la Huerta, Morelia 58190, Michoacán, Mexico.
Departamento de Botânica, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Av. Professor Morais Rego, 1235 - Cidade Universitária, Recife, Pernambuco 50670-901, Brazil.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2017 Feb;92(1):326-340. doi: 10.1111/brv.12231. Epub 2015 Nov 5.
Old-growth tropical forests are being extensively deforested and fragmented worldwide. Yet forest recovery through succession has led to an expansion of secondary forests in human-modified tropical landscapes (HMTLs). Secondary forests thus emerge as a potential repository for tropical biodiversity, and also as a source of essential ecosystem functions and services in HMTLs. Such critical roles are controversial, however, as they depend on successional, landscape and socio-economic dynamics, which can vary widely within and across landscapes and regions. Understanding the main drivers of successional pathways of disturbed tropical forests is critically needed for improving management, conservation, and restoration strategies. Here, we combine emerging knowledge from tropical forest succession, forest fragmentation and landscape ecology research to identify the main driving forces shaping successional pathways at different spatial scales. We also explore causal connections between land-use dynamics and the level of predictability of successional pathways, and examine potential implications of such connections to determine the importance of secondary forests for biodiversity conservation in HMTLs. We show that secondary succession (SS) in tropical landscapes is a multifactorial phenomenon affected by a myriad of forces operating at multiple spatio-temporal scales. SS is relatively fast and more predictable in recently modified landscapes and where well-preserved biodiversity-rich native forests are still present in the landscape. Yet the increasing variation in landscape spatial configuration and matrix heterogeneity in landscapes with intermediate levels of disturbance increases the uncertainty of successional pathways. In landscapes that have suffered extensive and intensive human disturbances, however, succession can be slow or arrested, with impoverished assemblages and reduced potential to deliver ecosystem functions and services. We conclude that: (i) succession must be examined using more comprehensive explanatory models, providing information about the forces affecting not only the presence but also the persistence of species and ecological groups, particularly of those taxa expected to be extirpated from HMTLs; (ii) SS research should integrate new aspects from forest fragmentation and landscape ecology research to address accurately the potential of secondary forests to serve as biodiversity repositories; and (iii) secondary forest stands, as a dynamic component of HMTLs, must be incorporated as key elements of conservation planning; i.e. secondary forest stands must be actively managed (e.g. using assisted forest restoration) according to conservation goals at broad spatial scales.
古老的热带森林正在全球范围内被广泛砍伐和破碎化。然而,通过演替,森林的恢复导致了人类改造的热带景观(HMTL)中次生林的扩张。因此,次生林成为热带生物多样性的潜在储存库,也是 HMTL 中基本生态系统功能和服务的来源。然而,这些关键作用存在争议,因为它们取决于演替、景观和社会经济动态,而这些动态在景观和地区内可能有很大差异。了解受干扰热带森林演替途径的主要驱动因素对于改善管理、保护和恢复策略至关重要。在这里,我们结合了热带森林演替、森林破碎化和景观生态学研究的新进展,以确定不同空间尺度上塑造演替途径的主要驱动力。我们还探讨了土地利用动态与演替途径可预测性之间的因果关系,并研究了这些关系的潜在影响,以确定次生林在 HMTL 中保护生物多样性的重要性。我们表明,热带景观中的次生演替(SS)是一种多因素现象,受到多种在多个时空尺度上起作用的力量的影响。在最近受干扰的景观中以及在景观中仍存在保护良好的生物多样性丰富的原生林的情况下,SS 相对较快且更可预测。然而,在受中度干扰的景观中,景观空间配置和基质异质性的变化增加了演替途径的不确定性。然而,在遭受广泛和密集人类干扰的景观中,演替可能会缓慢或停止,生物群集会变得贫瘠,提供生态系统功能和服务的潜力降低。我们得出结论:(i)必须使用更全面的解释模型来研究演替,提供有关影响不仅存在而且物种和生态群的持久性的信息,特别是那些预计将从 HMTL 中灭绝的分类群;(ii)SS 研究应整合来自森林破碎化和景观生态学研究的新方面,以准确解决次生林作为生物多样性储存库的潜力;(iii)次生林作为 HMTL 的动态组成部分,必须作为保护规划的关键要素纳入;即次生林必须根据广泛的空间尺度上的保护目标进行积极管理(例如,使用辅助森林恢复)。