4.7 Article

The impact of logging on vertical canopy structure across a gradient of tropical forest degradation intensity in Borneo

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 8, Pages 1764-1775

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13895

Keywords

Borneo; canopy structure; degradation; leaf area index; LiDAR; logging; tropical rainforest

Funding

  1. UK NERC [NE/S01537X/1, NE/K016458/1, NE/M017389/1]
  2. NCEO
  3. Frank Jackson Foundation
  4. ERC (GEM-TRAIT) [321131]
  5. IGA [LDF_VP_2016040]
  6. INGO II [LG15051]
  7. NERC [NE/K016458/1, NE/M017389/1, NE/S01537X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Forest degradation through logging has significant impacts on canopy structure, affecting plant area index and its vertical distribution. Airborne LiDAR surveys in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo, show the potential for quantifying structural impacts of forest degradation, even in dense and complex tropical forests. This research highlights the importance of detailed monitoring and the use of LiDAR technology in managing and restoring tropical forests.
1. Forest degradation through logging is pervasive throughout the world's tropical forests, leading to changes in the three-dimensional canopy structure that have profound consequences for wildlife, microclimate and ecosystem functioning. Quantifying these structural changes is fundamental to understanding the impact of degradation, but is challenging in dense, structurally complex forest canopies. 2. We exploited discrete-return airborne LiDAR surveys across a gradient of logging intensity in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo, and assessed how selective logging had affected canopy structure (Plant Area Index, PAI, and its vertical distribution within the canopy). 3. LiDAR products compared well to independent, analogue models of canopy structure produced from detailed ground-based inventories undertaken in forest plots, demonstrating the potential for airborne LiDAR to quantify the structural impacts of forest degradation at landscape scale, even in some of the world's tallest and most structurally complex tropical forests. 4. Plant Area Index estimates across the plot network exhibited a strong linear relationship with stem basal area (R-2 = 0.95). After at least 11-14 years of recovery, PAI was similar to 28% lower in moderately logged plots and similar to 52% lower in heavily logged plots than that in old-growth forest plots. These reductions in PAI were associated with near-complete lack of trees >30-m tall, which had not been fully compensated for by increasing plant area lower in the canopy. This structural change drives a marked reduction in the diversity of canopy environments, with the deep, dark understorey conditions characteristic of old-growth forests far less prevalent in logged sites. Full canopy recovery is likely to take decades. 5. Synthesis and applications. Effective management and restoration of tropical forests requires detailed monitoring of the forest and its environment. We demonstrate that airborne LiDAR can effectively map the canopy architecture of the complex tropical forests of Borneo, capturing the three-dimensional impact of degradation on canopy structure at landscape scales, therefore facilitating efforts to restore and conserve these ecosystems.

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