Tropical rain forest : disturbance and recovery : proceedings of a Royal Society Discussion Meeting held on 18 and 19 September 1991
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Tropical rain forest : disturbance and recovery : proceedings of a Royal Society Discussion Meeting held on 18 and 19 September 1991
Royal Society, c1992
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Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences Library
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Note
Also published in Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London series B, vol. 335 (no. 1275), p. 323-457
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Tropical rain forests are the richest ecosystems that the world has ever known. The great number of species that form them is the reason for their fascination to people, their value to the biosphere, and the complexity of their proper management. The land that they occupy, and the value of just one of their many useful products, timber, are the reasons why they are rapidly disappearing. This volume reports some of the results to date of a major interdisciplinary programme of rain forest research and training by British and south-east Asian scientists on "The recovery of tropical forests following disturbance: patterns and processes". The objective is to gain an understanding of the influence of the creation of gaps of various sizes and kinds, both natural and man-made, upon the flora and fauna of closed-canopy forest, and of the processes whereby these gaps will eventually be filled. Data obntained will allow better utilization of forest resources and better management of conservation areas.
Major studies in the first six years have examined spatial dynamics of trees, regeneration dynamics, the role of colonizing species and of mycorrhiza, forest hydrology and geomorphic processes, arthropods as decomposers and predators, and the effects of selective logging upon animal populations. These studies are essentially long-term and prescriptive conclusions cannot yet be reached, but the papers provide an bench-mark for the continuing work, a summary of what is known to date, and suggestions for future studies.
Table of Contents
- The Royal Society's south-east Asian rain forest research programme - an introduction, A.G. Marshall
- forest land-use in Sabah - an introduction to the Danum Valley, C.W. Marsh and A.G. Creer
- primary lowland dipterocarp forest at Danum Valley, Sabah, Malaysia - structure relative abundance and family composition, D. McG. Newbery, et al
- germination and growth of colonizing species in artificial gaps of different sizes in dipterocarp rain forest, D.N. Kennedy and M.D. Swaine
- do dipterocarp seedlings really partition rain forest gaps?, N.D. Brown and T.C. Whitmore
- the role of mycorrhizas in the regeneration of some Malaysian forest trees, I. Alexander, et al
- throughfall, stemfloow, overland flow and throughflow in the Ulu Segama rain forest, Sabah, W. Sinun, et al
- the impact of selective commercial logging on stream hydrology, chemistry and sediment loads in the Ulu Segama rain forest, Sabah, I. Douglas, et al
- litterfall, leaf litter decomposition and litter invertebrates in primary and selectively logged dipterocarp forest in Sabah, East Malaysia, T. Burghouts, et al
- fruiting phenology and the survival of insect fruit predators - a case study from the south-east Asian dipterocarpaceae, R.J. Toy, et al
- the response of some rain forest insect groups to logging and conversion to plantation, J.D. Holloway, et al
- vertebrate responses to selective logging - implications for the design of logging systems, A.D. Johns
- the consequence of selective logging for Bornean lowland forest birds, F.R. Lambert.
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