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Simulating the potential for ecological restoration of dryland forests in Mexico under different disturbance regimes
Authors:Elena Cantarello,Adrian C. NewtonRoss A. Hill,Natalia Tejedor-GaravitoGuadalupe Williams-Linera,Fabiola Ló  pez-BarreraRobert H. Manson,Duncan J. Golicher
Affiliation:a School of Applied Sciences, Bournemouth University, Talbot Campus, Poole, Dorset BH12 5BB, UK
b Instituto de Ecología, A.C., Carretera Antigua a Coatepec No. 351, 91070 Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico
Abstract:Examining the potential for ecological restoration is important in areas where anthropogenic disturbance has degraded forest landscapes. However, the conditions under which restoration of degraded tropical dry forests (TDF) might be achieved in practice have not been determined in detail. In this study, we used LANDIS-II, a spatially explicit model of forest dynamics, to assess the potential for passive restoration of TDF through natural regeneration. The model was applied to two Mexican landscapes under six different disturbance regimes, focusing on the impact of fire and cattle grazing on forest cover, structure and composition. Model results identified two main findings. First, tropical dry forests are more resilient to anthropogenic disturbance than expected. Results suggested that under both a scenario of small, infrequent fires and a scenario of large, frequent fires, forest area can increase relatively rapidly. However, forest structure and composition differed markedly between these scenarios. After 400 years, the landscape becomes increasingly occupied by relatively shade-tolerant species under small, infrequent fires, but only species with both relatively high shade tolerance and high fire tolerance can thrive under conditions with large, frequent fires. Second, we demonstrated that different forms of disturbance can interact in unexpected ways. Our projections revealed that when grazing acts in combination with fire, forest cover, structure and composition vary dramatically depending on the frequency and extent of the fires. Results indicated that grazing and fire have a synergistic effect causing a reduction in forest cover greater than the sum of their individual effects. This suggests that passive landscape-scale restoration of TDF is achievable in both Mexican study areas only if grazing is reduced, and fires are carefully managed to reduce their frequency and intensity.
Keywords:Landscape modelling   Tropical dry forest   Forest dynamics   Forest succession   Ecological restoration   Human disturbance   Fire and grazing regimes
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