Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17998
Título: Averting biodiversity collapse in tropical forest protected areas
Autor: Laurance, William F.
Carolina Useche, D.
Rendeiro, Julio
Kalka, Margareta B.
Bradshaw, Corey J.A.
Sloan, Sean P.
Laurance, Susan G.W.
Campbell, Mason J.
Abernethy, Katharine A.
Alvarez, Patricia
Arroyo-Rodríguez, Víctor
Ashton, Peter Shaw
Benítez-Malvido, Julieta
Blom, Allard
Bobo, Kadiri Serge
Cannon, Charles H.
Cao, Min
Carroll, Richard
Chapman, Colin A.
Coates-Estrada, Rosamond
Cords, Marina
Danielsen, Finn
Dijn, Bart de
Dinerstein, Eric
Donnelly, Maureen A.
Edwards, David P.
Edwards, Felicity A.
Farwig, Nina
Fashing, Peter J.
Forget, Pierre Michel
Foster, Mercedes
Gale, George A.
Harris, David J.
Harrison, Rhett D.
Hart, John A.
Karpanty, Sarah M.
Kress, W. John
Krishnaswamy, Jagdish
Logsdon, Willis
Lovett, Jon C.
Magnusson, William Ernest
Maisels, Fiona G.
Marshall, Andrew Robert
McClearn, Deedra
Mudappa, Divya C.
Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt
Pearson, Richard G.
Pitman, Nigel C.A.
Van Der Ploeg, Jan
Plumptre, Andrew J.
Poulsen, John R.
Quesada, M.
Rainey, Hugo J.
Robinson, Douglas
Roetgers, Christiane
Rovero, F.
Scatena, Frederick N.
Schulze, Christian Hansjoachim
Sheil, Douglas
Struhsaker, Thomas T.
Terborgh, John W.
Thomas, Duncan W.
Timm, Robert M.
Urbina-Cardona, J. Nicolás
Vasudevan, Karthikeyan
Wright, Stuart Joseph
Carlos Arias-G, Juan
Arroyo, Luzmila P.
Ashton, Mark S.
Auzel, Philippe
Babaasa, Dennis
Babweteera, Fred
Baker, Patrick J.
Bánki, Olaf S.
Bass, Margot S.
Inogwabini, Bila Isia
Blake, Stephen
Brockelman, Warren Y.
Brokaw, Nicholas V.L.
Brühl, Carsten Albrecht
Bunyavejchewin, Sarayudh
Chao, Jungtai
Chave, Jérôme
Chellam, Ravi
Clark, Connie J.
Clavijo, José
Congdon, Robert A.
Corlett, Richard T.
Dattaraja, Handanakere Shavaramaiah
Dave, Chittaranjan
Davies, Glyn
Mello Beisiegel, Beatriz de
Nazaré Paes da Silva, Rosa de
Di Fiore, Anthony
Diesmos, Arvin C.
Dirzo, Rodolfo
Doran-Sheehy, Diane M.
Eaton, Mitchell J.
Emmons, Louise H.
Estrada, Alejandro
Ewango, Corneille E.N.
Fedigan, Linda M.
Feer, François
Fruth, Barbara I.
Giacalone, Jacalyn
Goodale, Uromi Manage
Goodman, Steven Michael
Guix, Juan Carlos
Guthiga, Paul Maina
Haber, William A.
Hamer, Keith C.
Herbinger, Ilka
Hill, Jane
Huang, Zhongliang
Fang-Sun, I.
Ickes, Kalan
Itoh, Akira
Ivanauskas, Natália Macedo
Jackes, Betsy R.
Janovec, John P.
Janzen, Daniel H.
Jiangming, Mo
Jin, Chen
Jones, Trevor P.
Justiniano, Hermes
Kalko, Elisabeth Klara Viktoria
Kasangaki, Aventino
Killeen, Timothy J.
King, Henbiau
Klop, Erik
Knott, Cheryl Denise
Koné, Inza
Kudavidanage, Enoka P.
Lahoz da Silva Ribeiro, José
Lattke, John E.
LaVal, Richard K.
Lawton, Robert O.
Leal, Miguel E.
Leighton, Mark
Lentino, Miguel
Leonel, Cristiane
Lindsell, Jeremy A.
Lee, Ling-Ling
Eduard Linsenmair, Karl
Losos, Elizabeth C.
Lugo, Ariel E.
Lwanga, Jeremiah S.
MacK, Andrew L.
Martíns, Marlúcia Bonifácio
McGraw, William Scott
McNab, Roan Balas
Montag, Luciano F.A.
Myers Thompson, Jo A.
Nabe-Nielsen, Jacob
Nakagawa, Michiko
Nepal, Sanjay Kumar
Norconk, Marilyn A.
Novotný, Vojt?ch
O'Donnell, Sean
Opiang, Muse D.
Ouboter, Paul E.
Parker, Kenneth
Parthasarathy, Narayanaswamy
Pisciotta, Kátia Regina
Prawiradilaga, Dewi Malia
Pringle, Catherine M.
Rajathurai, Subaraj
Reichard, Ulrich H.
Reinartz, Gay Edwards
Renton, Katherine
Reynolds, Glen
Reynolds, Vernon
Riley, Erin
Rödel, Mark Oliver
Rothman, Jessica M.
Round, Philip D.
Sakai, Shoko
Sanaiotti, Tânia Margarete
Savini, Tommaso
Schaab, Gertrud
Seidensticker, John
Siaka, Alhaji M.
Silman, Miles R.
Smith, Thomas Bates
Almeida, Samuel Soares de
Sodhi, Navjot S.
Stanford, Craig
Stewart, Kristine
Stokes, Emma J.
Stoner, Kathryn Elizabeth
Sukumar, Raman
Surbeck, Martin
Tobler, Mathias W.
Tscharntke, Teja
Turkalo, Andrea K.
Umapathy, Govindaswamy
van Weerd, Merlijn
Vega-Rivera, Jorge H.
Venkataraman, Meena
Venn, Linda
Verea, Carlos
Castilho, Carolina Volkmer de
Waltert, Matthias
Wang, Benjamin C.
Watts, David P.
Weber, William
West, Paige
Whitacre, David
Whitney, Kenneth D.
Wilkie, David S.
Williams, Stephen E.
Wright, Debra D.
Wright, Patricia Chapple
Xiankai, Lu
Yonzon, Pralad B.
Zamzani, Franky
Palavras-chave: Anthropogenic Effect
Biodiversity
Data Set
Deforestation
Ecosystem Health
Endangered Species
Environmental Change
Environmental Degradation
Environmental Factor
Environmental Stress
Functional Group
Habitat Management
Protected Area
Refuge
Tropical Forest
Vulnerability
Animals Hunting
Biodiversity
Environmental Change
Environmental Exploitation
Habitat
Priority Journal
Tropical Rain Forest
Agriculture
Animal
Biodiversity
Conservation Of Natural Resources
Data Collection
Ecology
Endangered Species
Environmental Pollution
Fires
Forestry
Interviews As Topic
Mining
Population Growth
Questionnaires
Rain
Reproducibility Of Results
Research Personnel
Temperature
Trees
Tropical Climate
Data do documento: 2012
Revista: Nature
É parte de: Volume 489, Número 7415, Pags. 290-293
Abstract: The rapid disruption of tropical forests probably imperils global biodiversity more than any other contemporary phenomenon. With deforestation advancing quickly, protected areas are increasingly becoming final refuges for threatened species and natural ecosystem processes. However, many protected areas in the tropics are themselves vulnerable to human encroachment and other environmental stresses. As pressures mount, it is vital to know whether existing reserves can sustain their biodiversity. A critical constraint in addressing this question has been that data describing a broad array of biodiversity groups have been unavailable for a sufficiently large and representative sample of reserves. Here we present a uniquely comprehensive data set on changes over the past 20 to 30 years in 31 functional groups of species and 21 potential drivers of environmental change, for 60 protected areas stratified across the worlds major tropical regions. Our analysis reveals great variation in reserve health: about half of all reserves have been effective or performed passably, but the rest are experiencing an erosion of biodiversity that is often alarmingly widespread taxonomically and functionally. Habitat disruption, hunting and forest-product exploitation were the strongest predictors of declining reserve health. Crucially, environmental changes immediately outside reserves seemed nearly as important as those inside in determining their ecological fate, with changes inside reserves strongly mirroring those occurring around them. These findings suggest that tropical protected areas are often intimately linked ecologically to their surrounding habitats, and that a failure to stem broad-scale loss and degradation of such habitats could sharply increase the likelihood of serious biodiversity declines. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
DOI: 10.1038/nature11318
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