2016
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.12770
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Next‐generation tropical forests: reforestation type affects recruitment of species and functional diversity in a human‐dominated landscape

Abstract: Summary In tropical countries where little natural forest remains, such as the Philippines, small‐holder monocultures and mixed‐species plantations potentially provide conservation values by providing habitat for local fauna and recruiting diverse understorey species. However, little information exists as to whether monocultures offer a framework to kick‐start understorey species recruitment and how this compares to mixtures. In this study, species and trait diversity were measured within the understories of… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…First, our results suggest that while active restoration could drive consistent recovery of indicators directly related to specific interventions, the recovery of indicators not directly related to the interventions may be weaker and more variable. For example, planting native trees in AR plots had a strong direct effect on tree density (69% recovery toward BM targets), but indirect effects on indicators that might be influenced by changes in tree density and diversity, such as height-diameter ratios (Osuri et al 2014) and regeneration of late-successional species (Wills et al 2017), were weaker and more variable. Estimates of recovery in restored forests, and of the efficacy of active versus passive restoration interventions, can therefore vary markedly depending on what types of indicators are prioritized in assessments of restoration success.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, our results suggest that while active restoration could drive consistent recovery of indicators directly related to specific interventions, the recovery of indicators not directly related to the interventions may be weaker and more variable. For example, planting native trees in AR plots had a strong direct effect on tree density (69% recovery toward BM targets), but indirect effects on indicators that might be influenced by changes in tree density and diversity, such as height-diameter ratios (Osuri et al 2014) and regeneration of late-successional species (Wills et al 2017), were weaker and more variable. Estimates of recovery in restored forests, and of the efficacy of active versus passive restoration interventions, can therefore vary markedly depending on what types of indicators are prioritized in assessments of restoration success.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Remnant forest patches do not need to be pristine to host many important generalist seed dispersers (Wills et al . ). For example, in large regenerating areas in Kibale National Park, Uganda, mammal communities, including a number of primate species, recovered within 20 years of agricultural abandonment.…”
Section: Local and Landscape Factors Influence The Ecological Dynamicmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…As such, we speculate that dispersal of ECM fungi into plantation sites is necessary but restricted and limits the capacity for complete soil microbial restoration if tree planting is not accompanied by ECM inoculation of plantation seedlings (Aggangan et al, 2012). As the rainforestation plantations were established with some Dipterocarp trees, such that 11 out of 77 canopy species were Dipterocarps in 2006 , and had since recruited more in the understory (Wills et al, 2016), a lack of ECM inocula may be a major constraint to their capacity to restore soil microbial function and composition.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Typic Paleudults). In total, 25 sites were sampled, distributed across 15 locations spanning approximately 100 km from north to south, each at least 2 km from its nearest neighbour, with sufficient interspersion among plantation types to mitigate spatial autocorrelation effects (Wills et al, 2016). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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