4.8 Article

Demographic threats to the sustainability of Brazil nut exploitation

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 302, Issue 5653, Pages 2112-2114

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1091698

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A comparative analysis of 23 populations of the Brazil nut tree ( Bertholletia excelsa) across the Brazilian, Peruvian, and Bolivian Amazon shows that the history and intensity of Brazil nut exploitation are major determinants of population size structure. Populations subjected to persistent levels of harvest lack juvenile trees less than 60 centimeters in diameter at breast height; only populations with a history of either light or recent exploitation contain large numbers of juvenile trees. A harvesting model confirms that intensive exploitation levels over the past century are such that juvenile recruitment is insufficient to maintain populations over the long term. Without management, intensively harvested populations will succumb to a process of senescence and demographic collapse, threatening this cornerstone of the Amazonian extractive economy.

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