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      Tropical forest regeneration following land abandonment is driven by primary rainforest distribution in an old pastoral region

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      Landscape Ecology
      Springer Nature

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          Primary forests are irreplaceable for sustaining tropical biodiversity.

          Human-driven land-use changes increasingly threaten biodiversity, particularly in tropical forests where both species diversity and human pressures on natural environments are high. The rapid conversion of tropical forests for agriculture, timber production and other uses has generated vast, human-dominated landscapes with potentially dire consequences for tropical biodiversity. Today, few truly undisturbed tropical forests exist, whereas those degraded by repeated logging and fires, as well as secondary and plantation forests, are rapidly expanding. Here we provide a global assessment of the impact of disturbance and land conversion on biodiversity in tropical forests using a meta-analysis of 138 studies. We analysed 2,220 pairwise comparisons of biodiversity values in primary forests (with little or no human disturbance) and disturbed forests. We found that biodiversity values were substantially lower in degraded forests, but that this varied considerably by geographic region, taxonomic group, ecological metric and disturbance type. Even after partly accounting for confounding colonization and succession effects due to the composition of surrounding habitats, isolation and time since disturbance, we find that most forms of forest degradation have an overwhelmingly detrimental effect on tropical biodiversity. Our results clearly indicate that when it comes to maintaining tropical biodiversity, there is no substitute for primary forests.
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            Death to Kappa: birth of quantity disagreement and allocation disagreement for accuracy assessment

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              Tropical secondary forests

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Landscape Ecology
                Landscape Ecol
                Springer Nature
                0921-2973
                1572-9761
                March 2016
                September 2015
                : 31
                : 3
                : 601-618
                Article
                10.1007/s10980-015-0267-4
                12a771d6-e61f-468e-8834-4d619c65bc9f
                © 2016
                History

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