Martínez-Ramos Miguel, Ortiz-Rodríguez Iván A, Piñero Daniel, Dirzo Rodolfo, Sarukhán José
Laboratorio de Ecología y Manejo de Bosques Tropicales, Instituto de Investigaciones en Ecosistemas y Sustentabilidad, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Morelia, Michoacan 58190, Mexico;
Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Cd. de Mexico 04510, Mexico;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 May 10;113(19):5323-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1602893113. Epub 2016 Apr 11.
Anthropogenic disturbances affecting tropical forest reserves have been documented, but their ecological long-term cumulative effects are poorly understood. Habitat fragmentation and defaunation are two major anthropogenic threats to the integrity of tropical reserves. Based on a long-term (four decades) study, we document how these disturbances synergistically disrupt ecological processes and imperil biodiversity conservation and ecosystem functioning at Los Tuxtlas, the northernmost tropical rainforest reserve in the Americas. Deforestation around this reserve has reduced the reserve to a medium-sized fragment (640 ha), leading to an increased frequency of canopy-gap formation. In addition, hunting and habitat loss have caused the decline or local extinction of medium and large herbivores. Combining empirical, experimental, and modeling approaches, we support the hypothesis that such disturbances produced a demographic explosion of the long-lived (≈120 y old, maximum height of 7 m) understory palm Astrocaryum mexicanum, whose population has increased from 1,243-4,058 adult individuals per hectare in only 39 y (annual growth rate of ca 3%). Faster gap formation increased understory light availability, enhancing seed production and the growth of immature palms, whereas release from mammalian herbivory and trampling increased survival of seedlings and juveniles. In turn, the palm's demographic explosion was followed by a reduction of tree species diversity, changing forest composition, altering the relative contribution of trees to forest biomass, and disrupting litterfall dynamics. We highlight how indirect anthropogenic disturbances (e.g., palm proliferation) on otherwise protected areas threaten tropical conservation, a phenomenon that is currently eroding the planet's richest repositories of biodiversity.
影响热带森林保护区的人为干扰已有记录,但人们对其生态长期累积影响了解甚少。栖息地破碎化和动物种群减少是对热带保护区完整性的两大主要人为威胁。基于一项长期(四十年)研究,我们记录了这些干扰如何协同破坏生态过程,并危及美洲最北部热带雨林保护区洛斯图斯特拉斯的生物多样性保护和生态系统功能。该保护区周边的森林砍伐已将其缩减为一个中型碎片(640公顷),导致林冠间隙形成的频率增加。此外,狩猎和栖息地丧失已导致大中型食草动物数量减少或局部灭绝。结合实证、实验和建模方法,我们支持这样一种假说,即这些干扰导致了长寿(约120岁,最高7米)林下棕榈墨西哥星果棕数量的激增,其种群数量在短短39年内从每公顷1243 - 4058株成年个体增加到(年增长率约为3%)。更快的间隙形成增加了林下光照,促进了种子生产和未成熟棕榈树的生长,而摆脱哺乳动物的啃食和践踏则提高了幼苗和幼树的存活率。反过来,棕榈树数量的激增随后导致树种多样性降低,改变了森林组成,改变了树木对森林生物量的相对贡献,并扰乱了凋落物动态。我们强调了在其他方面受到保护的地区,间接人为干扰(如棕榈树大量繁殖)如何威胁热带地区的保护,这一现象目前正在侵蚀地球上生物多样性最丰富的宝库。