Phytogeography and conservation of neotropical dry forest with emphasis on Columbia
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Authors
Banda Rodriguez, Karina Paola
Abstract
Dry forest is one of the most threatened tropical forests in the world. Human impact
has caused its massive transformation but conservation of dry forest has often been
neglected across Latin America. In Colombia, less than 10% of the original extension
of dry forest remains. This thesis studies the phytogeography of neotropical dry forest
and its relevance for conservation using data from 1602 tree species inventories made
in dry forests across Latin America and the Caribbean synthesised by The Latin
American Seasonally Dry Tropical Forest Floristic Network (DRYFLOR). Clustering
and ordination analyses were used to explore the floristic relationships of dry forest
across the entire Neotropics, revealing distinctive regional clusters defined by their
tree species composition. Colombian dry forests are shown to be part of two wider
clusters, one including neighbouring forests in Venezuela and southern Central
America, and the second including the inter-Andean dry forests. The high turnover of
floristic diversity and endemism within and amongst the main floristic groups
demonstrates that to conserve the full species diversity in dry forests across Latin
America and the Caribbean will require protecting it simultaneously across multiple
regions.
A regionally focused study of floristic relationships in the Central American and
northern South American dry tropical forest group, using quantitative approaches to
conservation prioritization, including a new Conservation Priority Index (CPI),
suggests that conservation priority should be placed on the South American
Caribbean Coast in the cross-border area of Colombia and Venezuela. This
emphasises the need for a biogeographical approach to conservation that cannot be
restricted by political borders. Within Colombia, new quantitative floristic data were
used to investigate controls of floristic composition in dry forests. Multivariate
analyses showed that space related variables explain a larger fraction of the variance
of the floristic composition than climatic or edaphic variables. The importance of
spatial variables implies that biogeography is a key element in understanding the
structure of communities, and that the Andean cordilleras might be acting as
geographical barriers isolating these seasonally dry formations.
The value of floristic inventory data for assessing the conservation status of tree
species using IUCN criteria was assessed in a case of study of the Andean Piedmont
dry forest. By combining inventory data from the DRYFLOR database and herbarium
records, the number of species for which we have sufficient information to make
conservation assessments increases by 16% and the accuracy of predictive species
distribution improves for 84% of the species. Together, these results reveal the
importance of ecological inventory data as a complementary data source in
conservation assessment for dry forest trees in the Neotropics.
Finally, the conclusions chapter places these results in the context of conservation
planning for Colombian dry forests, including some suggestions for research, policies
and actions. These actions include restoration programmes focusing on sustainable
harvesting of native dry forest tree species, for example for firewood and other forest
resources such as fruits, fibres and medicines. A land use mosaic, including forest
fallows and strict conservation areas, may help to guarantee the long-term
maintenance dry forest species in Colombia.
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