Publication:
Conservation of Tropical Forests in the Anthropocene

dc.contributor.authorEdwards, D.P.
dc.contributor.authorSocolar, J.B.
dc.contributor.authorMills, S.C.
dc.contributor.authorBurivalova, Z.
dc.contributor.authorKoh, L.P.
dc.contributor.authorWilcove, D.S.
dc.date.accessioned2022-01-23T18:57:13Z
dc.date.available2022-01-23T18:57:13Z
dc.identifier.urihttps://open.fsc.org/handle/resource/899
dc.languageen
dc.rightsOpen access
dc.titleConservation of Tropical Forests in the Anthropoceneen
dcterms.abstractIf current trends continue, the tropical forests of the Anthropocene will be much smaller, simpler, steeper and emptier than they are today. They will be more diminished in size and heavily fragmented (especially in lowland wet forests), have reduced structural and species complexity, be increasingly restricted to steeper, less accessible areas, and be missing many heavily hunted species. These changes, in turn, will greatly reduce the quality and quantity of ecosystem services that tropical forests can provide. Driving these changes will be continued clearance for farming and monoculture forest plantations, unsustainable selective logging, overhunting, and, increasingly, climate change. Concerted action by local and indigenous communities, environmental groups, governments, and corporations can reverse these trends and, if successful, provide future generations with a tropical forest estate that includes a network of primary forest reserves robustly defended from threats, recovering logged and secondary forests, and resilient community forests managed for the needs of local people. Realizing this better future for tropical forests and people will require formalisation of land tenure for local and indigenous communities, better-enforced environmental laws, the widescale roll-out of payments for ecosystem service schemes, and sustainable intensification of under-yielding farmland, as well as global-scale societal changes, including reduced consumerism, meat consumption, fossil fuel reliance, and population growth. But the time to act is now, while the opportunity remains to protect a semblance of intact, hyperdiverse tropical forests.en
dcterms.issued2019
dcterms.typeJournal Article
dspace.entity.typePublication
fsc.evidenceCategoryFSC relevant studies
fsc.focus.forestTypeNatural Forest
fsc.focus.forestTypePlantation
fsc.focus.forestZoneTropical
fsc.focus.sustainDimension(not yet curated)
fsc.focus.tenureManagement(not yet curated)
fsc.focus.tenureOwnership(not yet curated)
fsc.issue.environmental(not yet curated)
fsc.topic.environmental(not yet curated)
fscdoc.hashidden.adminyes
fscdoc.hashidden.useryes
is.coverage.country(not yet curated)
is.coverage.region(not yet curated)
is.evaluation.collection(not yet curated)
is.evidenceSubType(not yet curated)
is.evidenceType(not yet curated)
is.extent.number19
is.extent.pages1008-1020
is.extent.volume29
is.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2019.08.026
is.identifier.fscdoihttp://dx.doi.org/10.34800/fsc-international870
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