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At the Amazon estuary, the oldest logging frontier in the Amazon, no studies have comprehensively explored the potential long-term population and yield consequences of multiple timber harvests over time. Matrix population modeling is one way to simulate long-term impacts of tree harvests, but this approach has often ignored common impacts of tree harvests including incidental damage, changes in post-harvest demography, shifts in the distribution of merchantable trees, and shifts in stand composition. We designed a matrix-based forest management model that incorporates these harvest-related impacts so resulting simulations reflect forest stand dynamics under repeated timber harvests as well as the realities of local smallholder timber management systems. Using a wide range of values for management criteria (e.g., length of cutting cycle, minimum cut diameter), we projected the long-term population dynamics and yields of hundreds of timber management regimes in the Amazon estuary, where small-scale, unmechanized logging is an important economic activity. These results were then compared to find optimal stand-level and species-specific sustainable timber management (STM) regimes using a set of timber yield and population growth indicators. Prospects for STM in Amazonian tidal floodplain forests are better than for many other tropical forests. However, generally high stock recovery rates between harvests are due to the comparatively high projected mean annualized yields from fast-growing species that effectively counterbalance the projected yield declines from other species. For Amazonian tidal floodplain forests, national management guidelines provide neither the highest yields nor the highest sustained population growth for species under management. Our research shows that management guidelines specific to a region's ecological settings can be further refined to consider differences in species demographic responses to repeated harvests. In principle, such fine-tuned management guidelines could make management more attractive, thus bridging the currently prevalent gap between tropical timber management practice and regulation.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4556458 | PMC |
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0136740 | PLOS |
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Department of Forest Sciences, "Luiz de Queiroz" College of Agriculture, University of São Paulo, Av. Pádua Dias, 235 - Agronomia, Piracicaba, São Paulo, SP, 13418-900, Brazil.
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CIRAD, UPR Forêts et Sociétés (FORETS), Montpellier, France.
Brazil's protected areas for sustainable use represent a massive shift in conservation policy that operationalizes the widespread global trend for governments to share resource management rights, responsibilities, and benefits with local communities via comanagement. ICMBio's Normative Instruction 16/2011 guides communities in comanagement of timber in the protected areas in which they live. We assessed this norm operationalization and governance in 7 timber comanagement projects in 3 Amazonian extractive reserves.
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Faculty of Environment, University of Northern British Columbia, 3333 University Way, Prince George, V2N4Z9, BC, Canada.
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Indigenous Knowledge Systems Centre, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, North-West University, Private Bag X2046, Mmabatho, 2790, South Africa.
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Research Institute of Subtropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China.
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