2013
DOI: 10.3390/su5031177
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Bird Pollinator Visitation is Equivalent in Island and Plantation Planting Designs in Tropical Forest Restoration Sites

Abstract: Active restoration is one strategy to reverse tropical forest loss. Given the dynamic nature of climates, human populations, and other ecosystem components, the past practice of using historical reference sites as restoration targets is unlikely to result in selfsustaining ecosystems. Restoring sustainable ecological processes like pollination is a more feasible goal. We investigated how flower cover, planting design, and landscape forest cover influenced bird pollinator visits to Inga edulis trees in young re… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Although plantations foster greater bird abundance and compositional similarity to old-growth forest than applied nucleation designs (Reid et al 2014;Vogel et al 2015), Vogel et al (2015) showed that Brazilian nucleation techniques facilitated exclusive species with higher richness and abundance (in disagree with Reid et al 2014). Overall, it is argued that applied nucleation facilitates pollinator visitation and tree recruitment to a similar degree as plantations, but with lower costs Lindell and Thurston 2013;Zahawi et al 2013). The nucleation approach may assist the natural assembly processes which should govern recovery (Corbin and Holl 2012;Holl et al 2013;Reis et al 2010).…”
Section: Nucleation: a New Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although plantations foster greater bird abundance and compositional similarity to old-growth forest than applied nucleation designs (Reid et al 2014;Vogel et al 2015), Vogel et al (2015) showed that Brazilian nucleation techniques facilitated exclusive species with higher richness and abundance (in disagree with Reid et al 2014). Overall, it is argued that applied nucleation facilitates pollinator visitation and tree recruitment to a similar degree as plantations, but with lower costs Lindell and Thurston 2013;Zahawi et al 2013). The nucleation approach may assist the natural assembly processes which should govern recovery (Corbin and Holl 2012;Holl et al 2013;Reis et al 2010).…”
Section: Nucleation: a New Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The few other studies directly measuring the effect of landscape‐scale factors on pollinator abundance or pollination in restorations have also not detected a strong relationship. A study examining pollination of Inga edulis (ice‐cream‐bean; Mart., Fabaceae) in restored forests found no effect of surrounding forest on pollinator visitation rates (Lindell & Thurston ). Similarly, a study of heathlands found pollination function (measured through a pollen transport network) was similar between restored and remnant heathlands, regardless of a restoration's proximity to remnant heathland (Forup et al ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reforestation of degraded Amazonian and Pantanal floodplains represents an opportunity to restore ecosystem function and services in these megadiverse wetlands (Chazdon 2008, Lindell and Thurston 2013, Mukul et al 2016. Floodplain forest fruits are commonly used as fishing bait by local fishers (Wittmann and Wittmann 2010).…”
Section: Reforestation Of Degraded Flooded Forestsmentioning
confidence: 99%