INVESTIGADORES
MANRIQUE Silvina Magdalena
artículos
Título:
Argentinian Yungas Forest Fragmentation: Effects on Aboveground Biomass, Microclimate and Carbon Storage
Autor/es:
MANRIQUE, SILVINA; VACAFLOR, PERLA; CRUZ, NORMA
Revista:
Open Journal of Forestry
Editorial:
Scientific Research Publishing
Referencias:
Lugar: Hubei Province; Año: 2018 vol. 08 p. 117 - 139
ISSN:
2163-0429
Resumen:
The Argentinian Yungas ecosystem, the more extensive of the two richest biodiversity ecoregions of the country, is subject to rapid deforestation and fragmentation. Because these fragments are the future biodiversity reserves of this ecosystem, it was interesting to know if they constitute small-scale repli- cas of the forest from which they were detached. Our objective was to charac- terise the fragments and compare them with sectors of continuous forest by studying the aboveground tree biomass (for the five most representative forest species), microclimate (three variables) and edaphic factors (three) as a func- tion of distance from forest edge at 15, 25, 50, 100 and 200 meters. We se- lected two size categories for fragments: 5 - 10 ha and 100 - 150 ha, located in the lower Yungas forest (LYF). We did sampling during the dry and wet sea- sons. As a result, in the larger fragments, the distance exerts a significant ef- fect on the records of the microclimate and edaphic variables, gradually mod- ifying them from the edge to the interior (up to at least 100 meters). The vari- ations are more evident in the wet season. Solar radiation and relative humid- ity were two of the factors with greater response (Spearman r= −0.89; p < 0.001 and r = 0.58; p < 0.001, in the dry season, respectively). The microcli- mate of small fragments does not depend on the edge distance, but it is ac- tually sunnier, drier and hotter than that of the forest. The soil has also lost organic carbon and humidity. These changes are accompanied by a lower AGB in the fragments with respect to the forest (6% and 60% of 162 ± 26.02 t∙ha−1, for small and big fragments, respectively). The five species studied show less density and trees of reduced dimensions (lower dbh and height). Fast- growing pioneer plant species and disturbance-loving lianas accompany them. Edge plant composition presents notorious changes in the bigger fragments. Biomass and ecosystem processes such as carbon cycling, which have been modified into fragments, both are directly associated with the structure and functioning in LYF remnants. The human and animal intervention detected in the area could be interacting synergistically with the microclimate and bio- logical changes observed and potentiate the effects of degradation in the frag- ments, creating conditions of greater threat to LYF?s biodiversity. However, the management of the LYF ecosystem within an adequate land use scheme could conserve and even encourage the recovery of the fragments ensuring a natural legacy of great importance for the country. Financing opportunities and globally assumed responsibilities in the context of climate change could consti- tute a favorable framework for the implementation of strategies to safeguard these forests.