Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project
收藏KNB Data Repository2007-01-01 更新2026-05-11 收录
下载链接:
https://knb.ecoinformatics.org/view/doi:10.5063/AA/nceas.326.3
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资源简介:
The BDFF (formerly the Minimum Critical Size of Ecosystems) Project is a collaborative research effort between Brazil's National Institute for Amazonian Research (INPA) and the Museum of Natural History of the Smithsonian. The BDFFP, begun in 1979, is the only experimental study of the process of habitat fragmentation under way in the Amazon basin. Initially, BDFFP researchers attempted to quantify how many species could survive in a forest reserve of a given size. Scientists censused the flora and fauna of a series of 12 forest plots of 1, 10 and 100 hectares before they were isolated from the surrounding forest by clearcutting, and subsequently monitored physical and ecological changes in the reserves after isolation. These studies demonstrated that certain species go extinct in forest isolates. Working in "control areas" of undisturbed forest, BDFFP researchers are trying to identify the factors that lead some taxa to extinction and permit other, often closely related, species to survive. As scientists observed changes in the isolated forest reserves, it became apparent that a number of factors, other than the size of the forest isolate, were important in determining the ecological stability of the forest reserves. A team of researchers and graduate students is investigating the physical and biological changes that occur along a newly created forest edge. Another group is studying the interactions between isolated forest ecosystems and the vegetation around the forest reserves as pasture gives way to scrubby, second-growth vegetation
提供机构:
NCEAS 9762 : Condit: Geographic Distribution Of Neotropical Tree Species; National Center For Ecological Analysis And Synthesis; Projeto Dinamica Biologica de Fragmentos
创建时间:
2007-01-01



