4.6 Article

Effects of Harvest of Nontimber Forest Products and Ecological Differences between Sites on the Demography of African Mahogany

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 605-614

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01345.x

Keywords

Africa; ecological variability; fulani; Khaya senegalensis; life-table response experiment; matrix models; nontimber forest products; NTFP; stochastic growth rate

Funding

  1. International Foundation for Science
  2. National Science Foundation [DGE 05-38550]

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The demographic impacts of harvesting nontimber forest products (NTFP) have been increasingly studied because of reports of potentially unsustainable harvest. Nevertheless, our understanding of how plant demographic response to harvest is altered by variation in ecological conditions, which is critical for developing realistic sustainable-use plans, is limited. We built matrix population models to test whether and how variation in ecological conditions affects population responses to harvest. In particular, we examined the effect of bark and foliage harvest on the demography of populations of African mahogany (Khaya senegalensis) in two contrasting ecological regions of Benin, West Africa. K. senegalensis bark and foliage harvest significantly reduced its stochastic population growth rates, but ecological differences between regions had a greater effect on population growth rates than did harvest. The effect of harvest on population growth rates (Delta lambda) was slightly stronger in the moist than in the drier region. Life-table response experiments revealed that the mechanism by which harvesting reduced. differed between ecological regions. Lowered stasis (persistence) of larger life stages lead to a reduction in. in the drier region, whereas lowered growth of all life stages lowered. in moist region. Potential strategies to increase population growth rates should include decreasing the proportion of individuals harvested, promoting harvester-owned plantations of African mahogany, and increasing survival and growth by promoting no-fire zones in gallery forests. Our results show how population responses to harvest of NTFP may be altered by ecological differences across sites and emphasize the importance of monitoring populations over the climatic range in which they occur to develop more realistic recommendations for conservation.

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