Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-tj2md Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T06:17:09.871Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Forest fragmentation and biodiversity: the case for intermediate-sized conservation areas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 October 2009

Pieter A. Zuidema*
Affiliation:
Prince Berhard Centre for International Nature Conservation, Faculty of Biology, Utrecht University, PO Box 800.84, 3508 TB Utrecht, The Netherlands
Jeffrey A. Sayer
Affiliation:
Prince Berhard Centre for International Nature Conservation, Faculty of Biology, Utrecht University, PO Box 800.84, 3508 TB Utrecht, The Netherlands Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), PO Box 6596, JKPBW, Jakarta 10065, Indonesia
Wim Dijkman
Affiliation:
Prince Berhard Centre for International Nature Conservation, Faculty of Biology, Utrecht University, PO Box 800.84, 3508 TB Utrecht, The Netherlands
*
* Pieter A. Zuidema Fax: 1 31 30 251 83 66 email: pieterz@bocv.biol.ruu.nl

Summary

Understanding the effects of forest fragmentation on biodiversity is essential for successful and efficient forest conservation. Four factors may cause loss of biodiversity in forest fragments: the effect of non-random sampling of the original forest, reduced forest size, isolation and edge effects. A review of 58 papers on effects of forest fragmentation reveals that general conclusions from fragmentation research are biased due to a focus on birds, on size-effects rather than isolation, and on species presence rather than population sizes. Perhaps the most important finding is that current knowledge on fragmentation effects is based mainly on studies in small fragments (<10 ha). These are dominated by edge effects, can not contain viable populations for many species and are rarely the focus of conservation programmes. Studies of small fragments can not be extrapolated to larger-sized, protected areas, and do not necessarily support the case for needing extremely large, protected areas. Conservation of medium-sized, strategically-located areas may be a more efficient option for biodiversity conservation, given financial, social and logistic limitations. More research is needed on forest fragments that arc representative of the sizes of real-world protected areas (i.e. >10 000–100 000 ha) and should focus on the biological and human-induced processes which determine species persistence.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aizen, M.A. & Feinsinger, P. (1994) Forest fragmentation, pollination, and plant reproduction in a chaco dry forest, Argentina. Ecology 75: 330–51.Google Scholar
Andrén, H. (1994) Effects of habitat fragmentation on birds and mammals in landscapes with different proportions of suitable habitat: a review. Oikos 71: 355–66.Google Scholar
Askins, R.A., Philbrick, M.J. & Sugeno, D.S. (1987) Relationship between the regional abundance of forest and the composition of forest bird communities. Biological Conservation 39: 129–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baz, A. & Garcia-Boyero, A. (1995) The effects of forest fragmentation on butterfly communities in central Spain. Journal of Biogeography 22: 129–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Becker, P., Moure, J.S. & Pcralta, F.J.A. (1991) More about euglossine bees in Amazonian forest fragments. Biotropica 23: 586–91.Google Scholar
Bennett, A.F. (1990) Habitat corridors and the conservation of small mammals in a fragmented forest environment. Landscape Ecology 4: 109–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bierregaard, R.O. & Lovejoy, T.E. (1989) Effects of forest fragmentation on Amazonian understorey bird communities. Ada Amazonica 19: 215–41.Google Scholar
Bierregaard, R.O.J., Lovejoy, T.E., Kapos, V., Dos Santos, A.A. & Hutchings, R.W. (1992) The biological dynamics of tropical rainforest fragments. Bioscicnce 42: 859–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blake, J.G. & Karr, J.R. (1984) Species composition of bird communities and the conservation benefit of large versus small forests. Biological Conservation 30: 173–87.Google Scholar
Boecklen, W.J. & Simberloff, D. (1986) Area-based extinction models in conservation. In: Dynamics of Extinction, ed. Elliott, D.K., pp. 247–76. New York: Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Boyle, T.J.B. & Saycr, J.A. (1995) Measuring, monitoring and conserving biodiversity in managed tropical forests. Commonwealth Forestry Review 74: 2025.Google Scholar
Brothers, T.S. & Spingarn, A. (1992) Forest fragmentation and alien plant invasion of central Indiana old-growth forests. Conservation Biology 6: 91100.Google Scholar
Collins, N.M., Sayer, J.A. & Whitmore, T.C., eds. (1991) The Conservation Atlas of Tropical Forests, Asia and the Pacific. London: IUCN/Macmillan: 256 pp.Google Scholar
Corlett, R.T. & Turner, I. M. (1997) Long-term survival in tropical forest remnants in Singapore and Hongkong. In: Tropical Forest Remnants: Ecology, Management and Conservation of Fragmented Communities, ed. Laurance, W.F. & Bierregaard, R.O.. Chicago: University of Chicago Press: in press.Google Scholar
De Souza, O.F.F. & Brown, V.K. (1994) Effects of habitat fragmentation on Amazonian termite communities. Journal of Tropical Ecology 10: 197206.Google Scholar
Diamond, J.M., Bishop, K.D. & Balen, S.V. (1987) Bird survival in an isolated Javan woodland: island or mirror? Conservation Biology 1: 132–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Didham, R.K., Ghazoul, J., Stork, N.E. & Davis, A.J. (1996) Insects in fragmented forests: a functional approach. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 11: 255–59.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dzwonko, Z. & Gawronski, S. (1994) The role of woodland fragment, soil types, and dominant species in secondary succession on the western Carpathian foothills. Vegetatio 11: 49160.Google Scholar
Dzwonko, Z. & Loster, S. (1989) Distribution of vascular plant species in small woodlands on the West Carpathian foothills. Oikos 56: 7786.Google Scholar
Esseen, P.A. (1994) Tree mortality patterns after experimental fragmentation of an old-growth conifer forest. Biological Conservation 68: 1928.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Estrada, A., Coates-Estrada, R., Meritt, D.J., Monticl, S. & Curiel, D. (1993) Patterns in frugivore species richness and abundance in forest islands and in agricultural habitats in Los Tuxtlas, Mexico. Vegetatio 107/108: 245–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
FAO (1995) State of the World's Forests. Rome: Forestry Department, FAO: 48 pp.Google Scholar
Forman, R.T.T., Galli, A.E. & Leek, C.F. (1976) Forest size and avian diversity in New Jersey woodlots with some land use implications. Oecologia 26: 18.Google Scholar
Gibbs, J.P. & Faaborg, J. (1990) Estimating the viability of ovenbird and Kentucky Warbler populations in forest fragments. Conservation Biology 4: 193–6.Google Scholar
Gilpin, M.E. & Soulé, M.E. (1986) Minimum viable populations: processes of species extinction. In: Conservation Biology: The Science of Scarcity and Diversity, ed. Soulé, M.E., pp. 1934. Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinauer Associates.Google Scholar
Haila, Y., Hanski, I.K. & Raivio, S. (1993) Turnover of breeding birds in small forest fragments: the ‘sampling’ colonization hypothesis corroborated. Ecology 74: 714–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hanski, I. (1989) Metapopulation dynamics: does it help to have more of the same? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 4: 113–14.Google Scholar
Hanski, I. (1994) Patch-occupancy dynamics in fragmented landscapes. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 9: 131–5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harcourt, C.S. & Sayer, J.A., eds. (1996) The Conservation Atlas of Tropical Forests, the Americas. New York: IUCN/Simon & Schuster: 335 pp.Google Scholar
Harrington, G.N., Irvine, A.K., Cromc, F.H.J. & Moore, L.A. (1997) In: Tropical Forest Remnants: Ecology, Management Conservation and of Fragmented Communities, eds. Laurance, W.F. & Bicrregaard, R.O.. Chicago: University of Chicago Press: in press.Google Scholar
Heywood, V.H. & Stuart, S.N. (1992) Species extinction in tropical forests. In: Tropical Deforestation and Species Extinction, eds. Whitmore, T.C. & Sayer, J.A., pp. 91117. London: IUCN, Chapman and Hall.Google Scholar
Heywood, V.H. & Watson, R.T., eds. (1995) Global Biodiversity Assessment. Cambridge: United Nations Environment Programme and Cambridge University Press: 1140 pp.Google Scholar
Heywood, V.H., Mace, G.M., May, R.M. & Stuart, S.N. (1994) Uncertainties in extinction rates. Nature 368: 105.Google Scholar
Howe, R.W. (1984) Local dynamics of bird assemblages in small forest habitat islands in Australia and North America. Ecology 65: 15851601.Google Scholar
ITTO (1993) ITTO Guidelines on the Conservation of Biological Diversity in Tropical Production Forests. Supplement to ITTO Guidelines for the sustainable management of Natural Tropical Forests. Yokohama: ITTO: 18 pp.Google Scholar
Janzen, D.H. (1983) No park is an island: increase in interference from outside as park size decreases. Oikos 41: 402–10.Google Scholar
Janzen, D.H. (1986) The eternal external threat. In: Conservation Biology. The Science of Scarcity and Diversity, ed. Soulé, M.E., pp. 182204. Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinauer Associates.Google Scholar
Kapos, V. (1989) Effects of isolation on the water status of forest patches in the Brazilian Amazon. Journal of Tropical Ecology 5: 173–85.Google Scholar
Klein, B.C. (1989) Effects of forest fragmentation on dung a carrion beetle communities in Central Amazonia. Ecology 70: 1715–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lande, R. (1993) Risks of population extinction from demographic and environmental stochasticity and random catastrophes. American Naturalist 142: 911–27.Google Scholar
Laurance, W.F. (1990) Comparative responses of five arboreal marsupials to tropical forest fragmentation. Journal of Mammalogy 71: 641–53.Google Scholar
Laurance, W.F. (1991 a) Ecological correlates of extinction proneness in Australian tropical rain forest mammals. Conservation Biology 5: 7989.Google Scholar
Laurance, W.F. (1991 b) Edge effects in tropical forest fragments: application of a model for the design of nature reserves. Biological Conservation 57: 205–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laurance, W.F. (1994) Rainforest fragmentation and the structure of small mammal communities in tropical Queensland. Biological Conservation 69: 2332.Google Scholar
Levenson, J.B. (1981) Woodlots as biogeographic islands in Southeastern Wisconsin. In: Forest Islands in Man-Dominated Landscapes, eds. Burgess, R.L. & Sharpe, D.M. pp. 1339. New York: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, T.E., Bierregaard, R.O., Rankin, J.M. & Schubart, H.O.R. (1983) Ecological dynamics of tropical forest fragments. In: Tropical Rain Forests: Ecology and Management, eds. Sutton, S.L., Whitmore, T.C. & Chadwick, A.C.. Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 377–84.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, T.E., Bierregaard, R.O., Rylands, A.B., Malcolm, J.R., Quintela, C.E., Harper, L.H., Brown, K.S., Powell, A.H., Powell, G.V.N., Schubart, H.O.R. & Hays, M.B. (1986) Edge and other effects of isolation on Amazon forest fragments. In: Conservation Biology: The Science of Scarcity and Diversity, ed. Soulé, M.E., pp. 257–85. Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinauer Associates.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, T.E., Rankin, J.M., Bierregaard, R.O., Brown, K.S., Emmons, L.H. & Van de Voort, M.E. (1984) Ecosystem decay of Amazon forest remnants. In: Extinctions, ed. Nitecki, M.H., pp. 295326. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Lynch, J.F. & Whigham, D.F. (1984) Effects of forest fragmentation on breeding bird communities in Maryland, USA. Biological Conservation 28: 287324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacArthur, R.H. & Wilson, E.O. (1967) The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.Google Scholar
MacDougall, A. & Kellman, M. (1992) The understorey light regime and patterns of tree seedlings in tropical riparian forest patches. Journal of Biogeography 19: 667–75.Google Scholar
Mader, H.D. (1984) Animal habitat isolation by roads and agricultural fields. Biological Conservation 29: 8196.Google Scholar
Malcolm, J.R. (1994) Edge effects in central Amazonian forest fragments. Ecology 75: 2438–45.Google Scholar
Matthiae, P.E. & Steams, F. (1981) Mammals in forest islands in Southeastern Wisconsin. In: Forest Islands in Man-Dominated Landscapes eds. Burgess, R.L. & Sharpe, D.M., pp. 5566. New York: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
McCloskcy, M. (1993) Note on the fragmentation of primary rainforest. Ambio 22: 250–1.Google Scholar
Meffe, G.K. & Carroll, C.R. (eds.) (1994) Principles of Conservation Biology. Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinauer Associates: 600 pp.Google Scholar
Mills, L.S. (1995) Edge effects and isolation: Red-backed Voles on forest remnants. Conservation Biology 9: 395403.Google Scholar
Murcia, C. (1995) Edge effects on fragmented forests: implications for conservation. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 10: 5862.Google Scholar
Newmark, W.D. (1991) Tropical forest fragmentation and the local extinction of understorey birds in the Eastern Usambara Mountains, Tanzania. Conservation Biology 5: 6778.Google Scholar
Nores, M. (1995) Insular biogeography of birds on mountain-tops in north western Argentina. Journal of Biogeography 22: 6170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norton, D.A., Hobbs, R.J. & Atkins, L. (1995) Fragmentation, disturbance, and plant distribution: mistletoes in woodland remnants in the Western Australian Wheatbelt. Conservation Biology 9: 426–38.Google Scholar
Nunney, L. & Campbell, K.A. (1993) Assessing minimum viable population size: demography meets population genetics. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 8: 234–9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Opdam, P.F.M., Van Dorp, D. & Ter Braak, C.J.F. (1984) The effect of isolation on the number of woodland birds in small woods in the Netherlands. Journal of Biogeography 11: 473–8.Google Scholar
Pahl, L.I., Winter, J.W. & Heinsohn, G. (1988) Variation in response of arboreal marsupials to fragmentation of tropical rainforest in North Eastern Australia. Biological Conservation 46: 7182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Porneluzi, P., Bednarz, J.C., Goodrich, L.J., Zawada, N. & Hoover, J. (1993) Reproductive performance of territorial ovenbirds occupying forest fragments and the contiguous forest in Pennsylvania. Conservation Biology 7: 618–22.Google Scholar
Powell, A.H. & Powell, G.V.N. (1987) Population dynamics of male euglos-sine bees in Amazonian forest fragments. Biotropica 19: 176–9.Google Scholar
Ranney, J.W., Bruner, M.C. & Levenson, J.B. (1981) The importance of edge in the structure and dynamics of forest islands. In: Forest Islands in Man-Dominated Landscapes, eds. Burgess, R.L. & Sharpe, D.M., pp. 6796. New York: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
Robinson, S.K., Thompson, F.R., Donovan, T.M., Whitchead, D.R. & Faaborg, J. (1995) Regional forest fragmentation and the nesting success of migratory birds. Science 267: 1987–90.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, K.V. & Raphael, M.G. (1986) Effects of forest fragmentation on vertebrates in douglas-fir forests. In: Wildlife 2000. Modelling habitat relationships of terrestrial vertebrates, ed. Vemcr, J., Morrison, M.L. & Ralph, C.J., pp. 263–73. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Rylands, A.B. & Kcuroghlian, A. (1988) Primate populations in continuous forest and forest fragments in central Amazonia. Ada Amazonica 18: 291307.Google Scholar
Santos, T. & Telleria, J.T. (1994) Influence of forest fragmentation on seed consumption and dispersal of Spanish Juniper Juniperus thrufera. Biological Conservation 70: 129–34.Google Scholar
Saunders, D.A., Hobbs, R.J. & Margules, C.R. (1991) Biological consequences of ecosystem fragmentation: a review. Conservation Biology 5: 1832.Google Scholar
Sayer, J.A. (1995) Science and international nature conservation. CIFOR Occasional Paper 4. Bogor, Indonesia.Google Scholar
Sayer, J.A., Hartcourt, N.M. & Collins, N.M., eds. (1992) The Conservation Atlas of Tropical Forests, Africa. London: IUCN/MacMillan: 288 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scanlan, M.J. (1981) Biogeography of forest plants in the prairie-forest eco-tone in Western Minnesota. In: Forest Islands in Man-Dominated Landscapes, eds. Burgess, R.L. & Sharpe, D.M., pp. 79124. New York: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
Schaffer, M.L. (1981) Minimum viable population sizes for species conservation. Bioscience 31: 131–4.Google Scholar
Schieck, J., Lertzman, K., Nyberg, B. & Page, R. (1995) Effects of patch size on birds in old-growth montane forests. Conservation Biology 9: 1072–84.Google Scholar
Simberloff, D. (1992) Do species-area curves predict extinction in fragmented forests? In: Tropical Deforestation and Species Extinction, eds. Whitmore, T.C. & Sayer, J.A., pp. 7589. London: IUCN, Chapman & Hall.Google Scholar
Simberloff, D. & Abele, L.G. (1982) Refuge design and island biogcographic theory: effects of fragmentation. American Naturalist 120: 4150.Google Scholar
Simberloff, D. & Gotelli, N. (1984) Effects of insularisation on plant species richness in the prairie-forest ecotone. Biological Conservation 29: 2746.Google Scholar
Skole, D. & Tucker, C. (1993) Tropical deforestation and habitat fragmentation in the Amazon, satellite data from 1978 to 1988. Science 260: 1905–10.Google Scholar
Soulé, M.E. (1987) Viable Populations for Conservation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Stouffer, P.C. & Bierregaard, R.O.J. (1995) Effects of forest fragmentation on understorey hummingbirds in Amazonian Brazil. Conservation Biology 9: 1085–94.Google Scholar
Telleria, J.L. & Santos, T. (1992) Spatiotemporal patterns of egg predation in forest islands: an experimental approach. Biological Conservation 62: 2933.Google Scholar
Telleria, J.L. & Santos, T. (1995) Effects of forest fragmentation on a guild of wintering passerines: the role of habitat selection. Biological Conservation 71: 61–7.Google Scholar
Temple, S.A. & Cary, J.R. (1988) Modeling dynamics of habitat-interior bird populations in fragmented landscapes. Conservation Biology 2: 340–6.Google Scholar
Tcrborgh, J. (1992) Maintenance of diversity in tropical forests. Biotropica 24: 283–92.Google Scholar
Thiollay, J.M. & Meyburg, B.U. (1988) Forest fragmentation and the conservation of raptors: a survey on the island of Java. Biological Conservation 44: 229–50.Google Scholar
Turner, I.M. (1996) Species loss in fragments of tropical rain forests: a review of the evidence. Journal of Applied Ecology 33: 200–9.Google Scholar
Turner, I.M. & Corlett, R.T. (1996) The conservation value of small, isolated fragments of lowland tropical rain forest. Trends in Ecology1 and Evolution 11: 330–3.Google Scholar
Van Apeldoorn, R.C., Celada, C. & Nicuwenhuizen, W. (1994) Distribution and dynamics of the red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris L.) in a landscape with fragmented habitat. Landscape Ecology 9: 227–35.Google Scholar
Van Dongen, S., Backeljau, T., Matthysen, E. & Dhondt, A.A. (1994) Effects of forest fragmentation on the population structure of the winter moth Operophtera brumata L (Lepidoptera, Geometridae). Acta Oecologica 15:193206.Google Scholar
Van Dorp, D. & Opdam, P.F.M. (1987) Effect of patch size, isolation and regional abundance on forest bird communities. Landscape Ecology 1: 5973.Google Scholar
Villard, M.A., Merriam, G. & Maurer, B.A. (1995) Dynamics in subdivided populations of neotropical migratory birds in a fragmented temperate forest. Ecology 76: 2740.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vogelmann, J.E. (1995) Assessment of forest fragmentation in Southern New England using remote sensing and geographic information systems technology. Conservation Biology 9: 439–49.Google Scholar
Weaver, M. & Kcllman, M. (1981) The effects of forest fragmentation on woodlot tree biotas in Southern Ontario. Journal of Biogeography, 8: 199210.Google Scholar
Whitcomb, R.F., Robbins, C.S., Lynch, J.F., Whitcomb, B.L., Klimkiewicz, M.K. & Bystrak, D. (1981) Effects of forest fragmentation on avifauna of the eastern deciduous forest. In: Forest Islands in Man-Dominated Landscapes, eds. Burgess, R.L. & Sharpe, D.M., pp. 125206. New York: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
Wilcox, B.A. (1980) Insular ecology and conservation. In: Conservation Biology, eds. Soulé, M.E. & Wilcox, B.A., pp. 95117. Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinaucr Associates.Google Scholar
Wilcox, B.A. & Murphy, D.D. (1985) Conservation strategy: the effects of fragmentation on extinction. American Naturalist 125: 879–87.Google Scholar
Williams-Linera, G. (1990) Vegetation structure and environmental conditions of forest edges in Panama. Journal of Ecology 78: 356–73.Google Scholar
Willson, M.F., Santo, T.L.D., Sabag, C. & Armesto, J.J. (1994) Avian communities of fragmented south-temperate rainforests in Chile. Conservation Biology 8: 508–20.Google Scholar
Young, A. & Mitchell, N. (1994) Microclimate and vegetation edge effects in a fragmented podocarp-broadleaf forest in New Zealand. Biological Conservation 67: 6372.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, A.G., Merriam, H.G. & Warwick, S.I., (1993) The effects of forest fragmentation on genetic variation in Acer saccharum Marsh, (sugar maple) populations. Heredity 71: 277–89.Google Scholar
Young, A., Boyle, T. & Brown, A. (1996) The population genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation for plants. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 11: 413–18.Google Scholar
Zimmerman, B.L. & Bierregaard, R.O. (1986) Relevance of the equilibrium theory of island biogeography and species-area relations to conservation with a case from Amazonia. Journal of Biogeography 13: 133–43.Google Scholar