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Recovery of logged forest fragments in a human-modified tropical landscape during the 2015-16 El Niño

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Abstract: The past 40 years in Southeast Asia have seen about 50% of lowland rainforests converted to oil palm and other plantations, and much of the remaining forest heavily logged. Little is known about how fragmentation influences recovery and whether climate change will hamper restoration. Here, we use repeat airborne LiDAR surveys spanning the hot and dry 2015-16 El Niño Southern Oscillation event to measure canopy height growth across 3,300 ha of regenerating tropical forests spanning a logging intensity gradient in Malaysian Borneo. We show that the drought led to increased leaf shedding and branch fall. Short forest, regenerating after heavy logging, continued to grow despite higher evaporative demand, except when it was located close to oil palm plantations. Edge effects from the plantations extended over 300 metres into the forests. Forest growth on hilltops and slopes was particularly impacted by the combination of fragmentation and drought, but even riparian forests located within 40 m of oil palm plantations lost canopy height during the drought. Our results suggest that small patches of logged forest within plantation landscapes will be slow to recover, particularly as ENSO events are becoming more frequent.

Description

Funder: Helsingin Yliopisto (University of Helsinki); doi: https://doi.org/10.13039/100007797; Grant(s): profit center: H5101; WBS-number: 75101002

Journal Title

Nature Communications

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-1723

Volume Title

12

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group UK

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Sponsorship
RCUK | Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) (NE/S01537X/1)
Ministerstvo Školství, Mládeže a Tělovýchovy (Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports) (INTER-TRANSFER LTT17017)