Tropical Forest Remnants: Ecology, Management, and Conservation of Fragmented Communities

  • Watson D
  • Laurance W
  • Bierregaard R
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Abstract

We live in an increasingly fragmented world, with islands of natural habitat cast adrift in a sea of cleared, burned, logged, polluted, and otherwise altered lands. Nowhere are fragmentation and its devastating effects more evident than in the tropical forests. By the year 2000, more than half of these forests will have been cut, causing increased soil erosion, watershed destabilization, climate degradation, and extinction of as many as 600,000 species. Tropical Forest Remnants provides the best information available to help us understand, manage, and conserve the remaining fragments. Covering geographic areas from Southeast Asia and Australia to Madagascar and the New World, this volume summarizes what is known about the ecology, management, restoration, socioeconomics, and conservation of fragmented forests. Thirty-three papers present results of recent research as well as updates from decades-long projects in progress. Two final chapters synthesize the state of research on tropical forest fragmentation and identify key priorities for future work.

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Watson, D. M., Laurance, W. F., & Bierregaard, R. O. (1998). Tropical Forest Remnants: Ecology, Management, and Conservation of Fragmented Communities. Journal of Mammalogy, 79(3), 1084. https://doi.org/10.2307/1383118

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