Tropical Rainforests and Agroforests under Global Change, 2010
Ecological and Socio-economic Valuations

Environmental Science Series

Language: English

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Tropical Rainforests and Agroforests under Global Change
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519 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback

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Tropical rainforests and agroforests under global change: ecological and socio-economic valuations
Publication date:
519 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback
not only for land use systems that depend on the regular supply of rain or irrigation water but also for the future development of natural rainforests as drought stress has been shown to a?ect tree growth and species composition in old-growth forests (Wright 1991, Walsh and Newbery 1999, Engelbrecht et al. 2007). A drought experiment conducted in a cacao agroforestry plantation showed that this plantation was surprisingly resilient to an induced drought of more than a year (Schwendenmann et al. 2009). However, droughts can have a strong impact on household incomes from agriculture, they strongly a?ect the vulnerability to poverty and thus have to be analyzed as important exogenous shocks to households, forcing them to adjust their behaviour and develop strategies to cope with these problems. The stability of rainforest margins is a critical factor in the protection of tropical rainforests (Tscharntke et al. 2007). At present, however, rainf- est margins in many parts of the tropics are far from stable, both in soc- economic and in ecological terms. For example, protected areas may attract, rather than repel, human settlement, which may be due to international donor investment in national conservation programs (Wittemeyer et al. 2008). An alternative hypothesis is that protected areas might be compromised if leakage takes place, that is, if impacts that would take place inside the restricted area are displaced to a nearby, undisturbed area (Ewers and Rodrigues 2008).
Tropical rainforests and agroforests under global change: Ecological and socio-economic valuations #x2014; an introduction.- I Agroforestry management in an ecological and socioeconomic.- Biodiversity patterns and trophic interactions in human-dominated tropical landscapes in Sulawesi (Indonesia): plants, arthropods and vertebrates.- The potential of land-use systems for maintaining tropical forest butterfly diversity.- Insect pollinator communities under changing land-use in tropical landscapes: implications for agricultural management in Indonesia.- Structure and management of cocoa agroforestry systems in Central Sulawesi across an intensification gradient.- Land tenure rights, village institutions, and rainforest conversion in Central Sulawesi (Indonesia).- Rural income dynamics in post-crisis Indonesia: evidence from Central Sulawesi.- Gender division of labor in agroforestry activities within households: a case of Wonogiri - Central Java - Indonesia.- The robustness of indicator based poverty assessment tools in changing environments - empirical evidence from Indonesia.- Demography, development, and deforestation at the rainforest margin in Indonesia.- II Climate change effects on tropical rainforests and.- Functional biodiversity and climate change along an altitudinal gradient in a tropical mountain rainforest.- Spatiotemporal trends of forest cover change in Southeast Asia.- Comparison of tree water use characteristics in reforestation and agroforestry stands across the tropics.- A comparison of throughfall rate and nutrient fluxes in rainforest and cacao plantation in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia.- Effects of #x201C;ENSO-events#x201D; and rainforest conversion on river discharge in Central Sulawesi (Indonesia).- Adaptation to climate change in Indonesia - livelihood strategies of rural households in the face of ENSO related droughts.- Terrestrial herb communities of tropical submontane and tropical montane forests in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia.- The hydraulic performance of tropical rainforest trees in their perhumid environment - is there evidence for drought vulnerability?.- III Integrated concepts of land use in tropical landscapes.- Principle and practice of the buffer zone in biosphere reserves: from global to local #x2013; general perspective from managers versus local perspective from villagers in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia.- Institutions for environmental service payment programmes - evidence of community resource management arrangements in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia.- Agricultural expansion in the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso; implications for C stocks and greenhouse gas emissions.- Contribution of agroforestry to biodiversity and livelihoods improvement in rural communities of Southern African regions.- Human ecological dimensions in sustainable utilization and conservation of tropical mountain rain forests under global change in southern Ecuador.- Linkages between poverty and sustainable agricultural and rural development in the uplands of Southeast Asia.
Provides an integrated scientific approach linking ecological, economic and social approaches at different scales Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras