Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6300190 Biological Conservation 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
International conservation efforts have ignored the role and importance of historic disturbance regimes, both natural and anthropogenic, in creating and maintaining biodiversity. In this article we focus on historic livelihoods and land uses which we argue can and should be viewed as a type of intermediate ecological disturbance that may increase landscape heterogeneity which is correlated with biological diversity. Using historic swidden in Bhutan as an example, we illustrate how this historic livelihood and land use maintained intermediate ecological disturbances in an otherwise densely forested landscape and increased plant structural heterogeneity, the proportion of early successional plant species, and the availability of forage and browse of importance to wild ungulates and their predators (e.g., tigers). The cessation of swidden in Bhutan and elsewhere alters historic disturbance regimes with potentially profound effects on flora and fauna. We argue that biodiversity conservation requires understanding and building upon ecological disturbance regimes which should include historic livelihoods and land uses. To be realized in practice, this requires not only further ecological study, but addressing the politics of knowledge.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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