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Thresholds for adding degraded tropical forest to the conservation estate

Ewers, Robert M.; Orme, C. David L.; Pearse, William D.; Zulkifli, Nursyamin; Yvon-Durocher, Genevieve; Yusah, Kalsum M.; Yoh, Natalie; Yeo, Darren C. J.; Wong, Anna; Williamson, Joseph; Wilkinson, Clare L.; Wiederkehr, Fabienne; Webber, Bruce L.; Wearn, Oliver R.; Wai, Leona; Vollans, Maisie; Twining, Joshua P.; Turner, Edgar C.; Tobias, Joseph A.; Thorley, Jack; Telford, Elizabeth M.; Teh, Yit Arn; Tan, Heok Hui; Swinfield, Tom; Svátek, Martin; Struebig, Matthew; Stork, Nigel; Sleutel, Jani; Slade, Eleanor M.; Sharp, Adam; Shabrani, Adi; Sethi, Sarab S.; Seaman, Dave J. I.; Sawang, Anati; Roxby, Gabrielle Briana; Rowcliffe, J. Marcus; Rossiter, Stephen J.; Riutta, Terhi; Rahman, Homathevi; Qie, Lan; Psomas, Elizabeth; Prairie, Aaron; Poznansky, Frederica; Pillay, Rajeev; Picinali, Lorenzo; Pianzin, Annabel; Pfeifer, Marion; Parrett, Jonathan M.; Noble, Ciar D.; Nilus, Reuben; Mustaffa, Nazirah; Mullin, Katherine E.; Mitchell, Simon; Mckinlay, Amelia R.; Maunsell, Sarah; Matula, Radim...

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Authors

Robert M. Ewers

C. David L. Orme

William D. Pearse

Nursyamin Zulkifli

Genevieve Yvon-Durocher

Kalsum M. Yusah

Natalie Yoh

Darren C. J. Yeo

Anna Wong

Joseph Williamson

Clare L. Wilkinson

Fabienne Wiederkehr

Bruce L. Webber

Oliver R. Wearn

Leona Wai

Maisie Vollans

Joshua P. Twining

Edgar C. Turner

Joseph A. Tobias

Jack Thorley

Elizabeth M. Telford

Yit Arn Teh

Heok Hui Tan

Tom Swinfield

Martin Svátek

Matthew Struebig

Nigel Stork

Jani Sleutel

Eleanor M. Slade

Adam Sharp

Adi Shabrani

Sarab S. Sethi

Dave J. I. Seaman

Anati Sawang

Gabrielle Briana Roxby

J. Marcus Rowcliffe

Stephen J. Rossiter

Terhi Riutta

Homathevi Rahman

Lan Qie

Elizabeth Psomas

Aaron Prairie

Frederica Poznansky

Rajeev Pillay

Lorenzo Picinali

Annabel Pianzin

Marion Pfeifer

Jonathan M. Parrett

Ciar D. Noble

Reuben Nilus

Nazirah Mustaffa

Katherine E. Mullin

Simon Mitchell

Amelia R. Mckinlay

Sarah Maunsell

Radim Matula

Michael Massam

Stephanie Martin

Yadvinder Malhi

Noreen Majalap

Catherine S. Maclean

Emma Mackintosh

SARAH LUKE Sarah.Luke@nottingham.ac.uk
Assistant Professor

Owen T. Lewis

Harry J. Layfield

Isolde Lane-Shaw

Boon Hee Kueh

Pavel Kratina

Oliver Konopik

Roger Kitching

Lois Kinneen

Victoria A. Kemp

Palasiah Jotan

Nick Jones

Evyen W. Jebrail

Michal Hroneš

Sui Peng Heon

David R. Hemprich-Bennett

Jessica K. Haysom

Martina F. Harianja

Jane Hardwick

Nichar Gregory

Ryan Gray

Ross E. J. Gray

Natasha Granville

Richard Gill

Adam Fraser

William A. Foster

Hollie Folkard-Tapp

Robert J. Fletcher

Arman Hadi Fikri

Tom M. Fayle

Aisyah Faruk

Paul Eggleton

David P. Edwards

Rosie Drinkwater

Rory A. Dow

Timm F. Döbert

Raphael K. Didham

Katharine J. M. Dickinson

Nicolas J. Deere

Tijmen de Lorm

Mahadimenakbar M. Dawood

Charles W. Davison

Zoe G. Davies

Richard G. Davies

Martin Dančák

Jeremy Cusack

Elizabeth L. Clare

Arthur Chung

Vun Khen Chey

Philip M. Chapman

Lauren Cator

Daniel Carpenter

Chris Carbone

Kerry Calloway

Emma R. Bush

David F. R. P. Burslem

Keiron D. Brown

Stephen J. Brooks

Ella Brasington

Hayley Brant

Michael J. W. Boyle

Sabine Both

Joshua Blackman

Tom R. Bishop

Jake E. Bicknell

Henry Bernard

Saloni Basrur

Maxwell V. L. Barclay

Holly Barclay

Georgina Atton

Marc Ancrenaz

David C. Aldridge

Olivia Z. Daniel

Glen Reynolds

Cristina Banks-Leite



Contributors

Abstract

Logged and disturbed forests are often viewed as degraded and depauperate environments compared with primary forest. However, they are dynamic ecosystems1 that provide refugia for large amounts of biodiversity2,3, so we cannot afford to underestimate their conservation value4. Here we present empirically defined thresholds for categorizing the conservation value of logged forests, using one of the most comprehensive assessments of taxon responses to habitat degradation in any tropical forest environment. We analysed the impact of logging intensity on the individual occurrence patterns of 1,681 taxa belonging to 86 taxonomic orders and 126 functional groups in Sabah, Malaysia. Our results demonstrate the existence of two conservation-relevant thresholds. First, lightly logged forests (<29% biomass removal) retain high conservation value and a largely intact functional composition, and are therefore likely to recover their pre-logging values if allowed to undergo natural regeneration. Second, the most extreme impacts occur in heavily degraded forests with more than two-thirds (>68%) of their biomass removed, and these are likely to require more expensive measures to recover their biodiversity value. Overall, our data confirm that primary forests are irreplaceable5, but they also reinforce the message that logged forests retain considerable conservation value that should not be overlooked.

Citation

Ewers, R. M., Orme, C. D. L., Pearse, W. D., Zulkifli, N., Yvon-Durocher, G., Yusah, K. M., Yoh, N., Yeo, D. C. J., Wong, A., Williamson, J., Wilkinson, C. L., Wiederkehr, F., Webber, B. L., Wearn, O. R., Wai, L., Vollans, M., Twining, J. P., Turner, E. C., Tobias, J. A., Thorley, J., …Banks-Leite, C. (2024). Thresholds for adding degraded tropical forest to the conservation estate. Nature, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07657-w

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 4, 2024
Online Publication Date Jul 17, 2024
Publication Date Jul 17, 2024
Deposit Date Jul 19, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jul 23, 2024
Journal Nature
Print ISSN 0028-0836
Electronic ISSN 1476-4687
Publisher Nature Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07657-w
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/37318328
Publisher URL https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07657-w

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