Effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the Western Ghats, India

Abstract Ecological restoration is a leading strategy for reversing biodiversity losses and enhancing terrestrial carbon sequestration in degraded tropical forests. There have been few comprehensive assessments of recovery following restoration in fragmented forest landscapes, and the efficacy of ac...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anand M. Osuri, Srinivasan Kasinathan, Mrinalini K. Siddhartha, Divya Mudappa, T. R. Shankar Raman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-09-01
Series:Ecosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2860
_version_ 1811326175632424960
author Anand M. Osuri
Srinivasan Kasinathan
Mrinalini K. Siddhartha
Divya Mudappa
T. R. Shankar Raman
author_facet Anand M. Osuri
Srinivasan Kasinathan
Mrinalini K. Siddhartha
Divya Mudappa
T. R. Shankar Raman
author_sort Anand M. Osuri
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Ecological restoration is a leading strategy for reversing biodiversity losses and enhancing terrestrial carbon sequestration in degraded tropical forests. There have been few comprehensive assessments of recovery following restoration in fragmented forest landscapes, and the efficacy of active versus passive (i.e., natural regeneration) restoration remains unclear. We examined 11 indicators of forest structure, tree diversity and composition (adult and sapling), and aboveground carbon storage in 25 pairs of actively restored (AR; 7–15 yr after weed removal and mixed‐native tree species planting) and naturally regenerating (NR) plots within degraded rainforest fragments, and in 17 less‐disturbed benchmark (BM) rainforest plots in the Western Ghats, India. We assessed the effects of active restoration on the 11 indicators and tested the hypothesis that the effects of active restoration increase with isolation from contiguous and relatively intact rainforests. Active restoration significantly increased canopy cover, adult tree and sapling density, adult and sapling species density (overall and late‐successional), compositional similarity to benchmarks, and aboveground carbon storage, which recovered 14–82% toward BM targets relative to NR baselines. By contrast, tree height–diameter ratios and the proportion of native saplings did not recover consistently in actively restored forests. The effects of active restoration on canopy cover, species density (adult), late‐successional species density (adult and sapling), and species composition, but not carbon storage, increased with isolation across the fragmented landscape. Our findings show that active restoration can promote recovery of forest structure, composition, and carbon storage within 7–15 yr of restoration in degraded tropical rainforest fragments, although the benefits of active over passive restoration across fragmented landscapes would depend on indicator type and may increase with site isolation. These findings on early stages of recovery suggest that active restoration in ubiquitous fragmented landscapes of the tropics could complement passive restoration of degraded forests in less fragmented landscapes, and protection of intact forests, as a key strategy for conserving biodiversity and mitigating climate change.
first_indexed 2024-04-13T14:45:41Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f01814cd57a945aaa0da93294712cb07
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2150-8925
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-13T14:45:41Z
publishDate 2019-09-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Ecosphere
spelling doaj.art-f01814cd57a945aaa0da93294712cb072022-12-22T02:42:46ZengWileyEcosphere2150-89252019-09-01109n/an/a10.1002/ecs2.2860Effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the Western Ghats, IndiaAnand M. Osuri0Srinivasan Kasinathan1Mrinalini K. Siddhartha2Divya Mudappa3T. R. Shankar Raman4The Earth Institute Columbia University New York New York 10025 USANature Conservation Foundation ‘Amrita’ 1311, 12th A Main, Vijayanagar 1st Stage Mysore 570017 IndiaNature Conservation Foundation ‘Amrita’ 1311, 12th A Main, Vijayanagar 1st Stage Mysore 570017 IndiaNature Conservation Foundation ‘Amrita’ 1311, 12th A Main, Vijayanagar 1st Stage Mysore 570017 IndiaNature Conservation Foundation ‘Amrita’ 1311, 12th A Main, Vijayanagar 1st Stage Mysore 570017 IndiaAbstract Ecological restoration is a leading strategy for reversing biodiversity losses and enhancing terrestrial carbon sequestration in degraded tropical forests. There have been few comprehensive assessments of recovery following restoration in fragmented forest landscapes, and the efficacy of active versus passive (i.e., natural regeneration) restoration remains unclear. We examined 11 indicators of forest structure, tree diversity and composition (adult and sapling), and aboveground carbon storage in 25 pairs of actively restored (AR; 7–15 yr after weed removal and mixed‐native tree species planting) and naturally regenerating (NR) plots within degraded rainforest fragments, and in 17 less‐disturbed benchmark (BM) rainforest plots in the Western Ghats, India. We assessed the effects of active restoration on the 11 indicators and tested the hypothesis that the effects of active restoration increase with isolation from contiguous and relatively intact rainforests. Active restoration significantly increased canopy cover, adult tree and sapling density, adult and sapling species density (overall and late‐successional), compositional similarity to benchmarks, and aboveground carbon storage, which recovered 14–82% toward BM targets relative to NR baselines. By contrast, tree height–diameter ratios and the proportion of native saplings did not recover consistently in actively restored forests. The effects of active restoration on canopy cover, species density (adult), late‐successional species density (adult and sapling), and species composition, but not carbon storage, increased with isolation across the fragmented landscape. Our findings show that active restoration can promote recovery of forest structure, composition, and carbon storage within 7–15 yr of restoration in degraded tropical rainforest fragments, although the benefits of active over passive restoration across fragmented landscapes would depend on indicator type and may increase with site isolation. These findings on early stages of recovery suggest that active restoration in ubiquitous fragmented landscapes of the tropics could complement passive restoration of degraded forests in less fragmented landscapes, and protection of intact forests, as a key strategy for conserving biodiversity and mitigating climate change.https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2860carbon storageclimate change mitigationconservationecological restorationforest recoverynatural regeneration
spellingShingle Anand M. Osuri
Srinivasan Kasinathan
Mrinalini K. Siddhartha
Divya Mudappa
T. R. Shankar Raman
Effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the Western Ghats, India
Ecosphere
carbon storage
climate change mitigation
conservation
ecological restoration
forest recovery
natural regeneration
title Effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the Western Ghats, India
title_full Effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the Western Ghats, India
title_fullStr Effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the Western Ghats, India
title_full_unstemmed Effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the Western Ghats, India
title_short Effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the Western Ghats, India
title_sort effects of restoration on tree communities and carbon storage in rainforest fragments of the western ghats india
topic carbon storage
climate change mitigation
conservation
ecological restoration
forest recovery
natural regeneration
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.2860
work_keys_str_mv AT anandmosuri effectsofrestorationontreecommunitiesandcarbonstorageinrainforestfragmentsofthewesternghatsindia
AT srinivasankasinathan effectsofrestorationontreecommunitiesandcarbonstorageinrainforestfragmentsofthewesternghatsindia
AT mrinaliniksiddhartha effectsofrestorationontreecommunitiesandcarbonstorageinrainforestfragmentsofthewesternghatsindia
AT divyamudappa effectsofrestorationontreecommunitiesandcarbonstorageinrainforestfragmentsofthewesternghatsindia
AT trshankarraman effectsofrestorationontreecommunitiesandcarbonstorageinrainforestfragmentsofthewesternghatsindia