Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK.
Stockholm Environment Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Dec;24(12):5680-5694. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14443. Epub 2018 Oct 4.
Secondary forests (SFs) regenerating on previously deforested land account for large, expanding areas of tropical forest cover. Given that tropical forests rank among Earth's most important reservoirs of carbon and biodiversity, SFs play an increasingly pivotal role in the carbon cycle and as potential habitat for forest biota. Nevertheless, their capacity to regain the biotic attributes of undisturbed primary forests (UPFs) remains poorly understood. Here, we provide a comprehensive assessment of SF recovery, using extensive tropical biodiversity, biomass, and environmental datasets. These data, collected in 59 naturally regenerating SFs and 30 co-located UPFs in the eastern Amazon, cover >1,600 large- and small-stemmed plant, bird, and dung beetles species and a suite of forest structure, landscape context, and topoedaphic predictors. After up to 40 years of regeneration, the SFs we surveyed showed a high degree of biodiversity resilience, recovering, on average among taxa, 88% and 85% mean UPF species richness and composition, respectively. Across the first 20 years of succession, the period for which we have accurate SF age data, biomass recovered at 1.2% per year, equivalent to a carbon uptake rate of 2.25 Mg/ha per year, while, on average, species richness and composition recovered at 2.6% and 2.3% per year, respectively. For all taxonomic groups, biomass was strongly associated with SF species distributions. However, other variables describing habitat complexity-canopy cover and understory stem density-were equally important occurrence predictors for most taxa. Species responses to biomass revealed a successional transition at approximately 75 Mg/ha, marking the influx of high-conservation-value forest species. Overall, our results show that naturally regenerating SFs can accumulate substantial amounts of carbon and support many forest species. However, given that the surveyed SFs failed to return to a typical UPF state, SFs are not substitutes for UPFs.
次生林(SFs)在先前被砍伐的土地上再生,占据了大片不断扩大的热带森林覆盖面积。鉴于热带森林是地球上最重要的碳和生物多样性储存库之一,SFs 在碳循环中发挥着越来越关键的作用,并且可能成为森林生物区系的潜在栖息地。然而,它们恢复未受干扰的原始森林(UPFs)生物属性的能力仍然知之甚少。在这里,我们使用广泛的热带生物多样性、生物量和环境数据集,对 SF 恢复进行了全面评估。这些数据是在亚马逊东部的 59 个自然再生 SF 和 30 个相邻的 UPF 中收集的,涵盖了>1600 种大型和小型茎植物、鸟类和蜣螂物种,以及一系列森林结构、景观背景和地形预测因子。在长达 40 年的再生之后,我们调查的 SF 表现出了高度的生物多样性恢复能力,平均而言,在分类群中,恢复了 88%和 85%的 UPF 物种丰富度和组成。在最初的 20 年演替中,我们有准确的 SF 年龄数据,生物量以每年 1.2%的速度恢复,相当于每年 2.25 Mg/ha 的碳吸收速率,而平均而言,物种丰富度和组成分别以每年 2.6%和 2.3%的速度恢复。对于所有分类群,生物量与 SF 物种分布密切相关。然而,其他描述栖息地复杂性的变量——树冠覆盖和林下茎密度——对大多数分类群的存在同样是重要的预测因子。物种对生物量的反应揭示了大约 75 Mg/ha 的演替过渡,标志着高保护价值的森林物种的涌入。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明,自然再生的 SFs 可以积累大量的碳,并支持许多森林物种。然而,鉴于调查的 SFs 未能恢复到典型的 UPF 状态,SFs 不能替代 UPFs。