书目名称 | Co-benefits of Sustainable Forestry |
副标题 | Ecological Studies o |
编辑 | Kanehiro Kitayama |
视频video | http://file.papertrans.cn/229/228601/228601.mp4 |
概述 | Thorough descriptions of biological communities in a tropical forest after logging.A wide array of ecological approaches including ground, airborne, satellite, and modeling.Provides support material f |
丛书名称 | Ecological Research Monographs |
图书封面 |  |
描述 | Tropical rain forests are increasingly expected to serve for climate change mitigation and biodiversity conservation amid global climate change and increasing human demands for land. Natural production forests that are legally designated to produce timber occur widely in the Southeast Asian tropics. Synergizing timber production, climate change mitigation and biodiversity conservation in such tropical production forests is one of the most realistic means to resolve these contemporary global problems. Next-generation sustainable forest management is being practiced in the natural tropical rain forest of a model site in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo, while earlier sustainable management practices have generally failed, leading to extensive deforestation and forest degradation elsewhere in the tropics. Ecologists have examined co-benefits of sustainable forestry in the model forest in terms of forest regeneration, carbon sequestration and biodiversity in comparison to a forest managed by destructive conventional methods. Taxonomic groups studied have included trees, decomposers, soil microbes, insects and mammals. A wide array of field methods and technology has been used including count pl |
出版日期 | Book 2013 |
关键词 | Biodiversity; Conservation; Forest Management; Reserves; Sustainable; Forestry Management |
版次 | 1 |
doi | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-54141-7 |
isbn_softcover | 978-4-431-54712-9 |
isbn_ebook | 978-4-431-54141-7Series ISSN 2191-0707 Series E-ISSN 2191-0715 |
issn_series | 2191-0707 |
copyright | Springer Japan 2013 |