Artículos de revistas
Landscape structural analysis of the Lencois Maranhenses national park: implications for conservation
Fecha
2019-10-01Registro en:
Journal For Nature Conservation. Munich: Elsevier Gmbh, v. 51, 9 p., 2019.
1617-1381
10.1016/j.jnc.2019.125725
WOS:000497780400005
4158685235743119
Autor
Univ Fed Maranhao
Inst Chico Mendes Conservacao Biodiversidade
Univ Estadual Maranhao
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
Our work evaluated the anthropic effects on the landscape structure of the Lencois Maranhenses National Park (LMNP) and its Buffer Zone, and proposed strategies for the region's conservation. LMNP is an important protected area in Brazilian north coast which protects a unique wetland ecosystem composed of sand dunes fields and a coastal vegetation called restinga. Supervised mapping of LMNP and a surrounding buffer of 3 km was carried out through high resolution and fine scale (1:5000) satellite images. The mapped area was subdivided in 1000 ha hexagonal Analysis Units (AU) and the following landscape metrics were calculated for each one of them: cover area (CA) of each soil cover class - dune fields (CA-DUNES), water bodies (CA-WATER), dense restinga (CADENSE), scattered restinga (CA-SCATTER), grassland (CA-SANDY), mangroves (CA-MANG), anthropogenic activity (CA-ANTRO) and, secondary vegetation (CA-SECOND); Landscape Shannon Diversity Index (SHDI), and; percentage of native vegetation cover (NV-COV). Pearson correlations were performed between the CA of each class and SHDI to identify the classes most correlated to CA-ANTRO. Our results showed that anthropic classes (crops, trails, and villages) had a stronger correlation (Pearson Correlation, r approximate to 0.65) with phytophysiognomies of dense restinga, secondary vegetation and SHDI, thus indicating that the land use conversion occurs in dense restinga areas and promotes vegetation secondarization, as well as increasing fragmentation. At least, 42% of the dense restinga habitats was destroyed due to human activities. Five conservation and restoration strategies were proposed in a local scale depending on the percentage of native vegetation cover on each AU, from the most to less conserved: (a) only conservation; (b) conservation with management; (c) management; (d) management and restoration; and, (e) restoration. The implementation of Agroforestry Systems with agro-successional restoration goals was recommended as an alternative for land use.