Artículos de revistas
Forest restoration in an indigenous land considering a forest remnant influence (Avai, Sao Paulo State, Brazil)
Fecha
2008Registro en:
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, v.255, n.3/Abr, p.513-521, 2008
0378-1127
10.1016/j.foreco.2007.09.020
Autor
BERTONCINI, Alzira Politi
RODRIGUES, Ricardo Ribeiro
Institución
Resumen
The expansion of agricultural and pasture areas over native forest areas has been broadly documented and represents the main cause of deforestation that has occurred for the last decades. Such reality is not different in indigenous lands, and has been considered as an important obstacle for individuals who directly depend upon the appropriate management of natural resources to maintain their traditions. We investigated the seed rain, seed bank and natural regeneration of native woody species within a degraded pasture land in different distances from an adjacent seasonal semideciduous forest fragment to define methodological procedures based on ecological processes that might subsidize forest restoration in an indigenous land. Most seeds and seedlings picked from the seed rain and seed bank belonged to anemochoric and autochoric dispersing shrubby and herbaceous species originated in the pasture land. The woody species regeneration, on the other hand, reached higher levels, in terms of abundance and richness, as the forest fragment became closer. Zoochoric dispersal was predominant among such species and was mainly detected closer to the forest fragment. Several woody species picked in the forest fragment were also found in the pasture land, thus reinforcing their important role in supplying propagules and easing the successional process. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.