Big-leaf mahogany Swietenia macrophylla population dynamics and implications for sustainable management
Authored by Christopher M Free, R Matthew Landis, James Grogan, Mark D Schulze, Marco Lentini, Mark S Ashton
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.12210
Sponsors:
USDA Forest Service's International Institute of Tropical Forestry
ITTO-CITES Programme
USAID Brasil
Charles A. and Anne Morrow Lindbergh Foundation
International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO)
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The impacts of selective harvesting in tropical forests on population
recovery and future timber yields by high-value species remain largely
unknown for lack of demographic data spanning all phases of life
history, from seed to senescence. In this study, we use an
individual-based model parameterized using 15years of annual census data
to simulate population dynamics of big-leaf mahogany Swietenia
macrophylla King in southeast Amazonia in response to multiple harvests
and in the absence of harvesting. The model is based on regression
equations of stem diameter growth, mortality, and fruit production
estimated as a function of stem diameter and prior growth; it includes
functions for germinating seeds, growing trees from seedling to adult
senescence, producing seeds, and creating disturbances at specified
spatial scales and return intervals, including logging. We simulate six
harvest scenarios by varying the minimum diameter cutting limit (60cm, 80cm) and the retention rate requirement (20\%, 40\% and 60\% commercial
population retained). Without logging, simulated populations grew over
100years by 182\% from observed densities, indicating that one or more
parameters in the model may overestimate long-term demographic rates on
this landscape. However, 100-year densities did not far exceed values
reported from forests across this region, and other modelled demographic
parameters resembled observed behaviours. Under current harvest
regulations for mahogany in Brazil (60cm minimum diameter cutting limit, 20\% commercial-sized tree retention rate, minimum 5 commercial-sized
trees 100ha(-1) retained after harvest, 30-year cutting cycle), commercial densities at the study site would decline from 39 center dot
7 to 11 center dot 3 trees 100ha(-1) before the fourth harvest in year
90, yielding an estimated 16 center dot 4\% of the initial harvest
volume during the fourth harvest. Increasing retention rates caused
first-cut harvest volumes to decline but improved population recovery
rates between harvests. Under both minimum diameter cutting limit
scenarios, increasing retention rates led to more robust population
recovery compared with the current 20\% rate, and higher subsequent
harvest yields relative to initial (first-cut) values. Synthesis and
applications. These results indicate that current harvest regulations in
Brazil for mahogany and other high-value timber species with similar
life histories will lead to commercial depletion after 2-3 cutting
cycles. Increasing commercial-sized tree retention rates improved
population recovery at the cost of reduced initial harvest volume
yields. Sustainable harvests will require, in combination, a moderate
increase in the retention rate, investment in artificial regeneration to
boost population recovery, and implementation of silvicultural practices
designed to increase growth rates by future crop trees.
Tags
growth
Brazilian amazon
Tropical rain-forests
Tree
Southeast para
Logging gaps
Silvicultural
treatments
Seedling regeneration
Natural-resource
Bolivian amazon