Redefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation

The Mexican Forest Code establishes structural reference values to differentiate between secondary and old-growth forests and requires a management plan when secondary forests become old-growth and potentially harvestable forests. The implications of this regulation for forest management, restoration, and conservation were assessed in the context of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, which is located in the Yucatan Peninsula. The basal area and stem density thresholds currently used by the legislation to differentiate old-growth from secondary forests are 4 m2/ha and 15 trees/ha (trees with a diameter at breast height of >25 cm); however, our research indicates that these values should be increased to 20 m2/ha and 100 trees/ha, respectively. Given that a management plan is required when secondary forests become old-growth forests, many landowners avoid forest-stand development by engaging slash-and-burn agriculture or cattle grazing. We present evidence that deforestation and land degradation may prevent the natural regeneration of late-successional tree species of high ecological and economic importance. Moreover, we discuss the results of this study in the light of an ongoing debate in the Yucatan Peninsula between policy makers, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), landowners and researchers, regarding the modification of this regulation to redefine the concept of acahual (secondary forest) and to facilitate forest management and restoration with valuable timber tree species.

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Main Authors: Román Dañobeytia, Francisco José autor 12560, Levy Tacher, Samuel Israel Doctor autor 6877, Macario Mendoza, Pedro A. Doctor autor 2047, Zúñiga Morales, José Adalberto autor
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Ley General de Desarrollo Forestal Sustentable (México), Bosque secundario, Ordenación forestal, Restauración forestal, Conservación de bosques, Artfrosur,
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/5/5/978/htm
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:533872024-03-12T12:51:43ZRedefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation Román Dañobeytia, Francisco José autor 12560 Levy Tacher, Samuel Israel Doctor autor 6877 Macario Mendoza, Pedro A. Doctor autor 2047 Zúñiga Morales, José Adalberto autor textengThe Mexican Forest Code establishes structural reference values to differentiate between secondary and old-growth forests and requires a management plan when secondary forests become old-growth and potentially harvestable forests. The implications of this regulation for forest management, restoration, and conservation were assessed in the context of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, which is located in the Yucatan Peninsula. The basal area and stem density thresholds currently used by the legislation to differentiate old-growth from secondary forests are 4 m2/ha and 15 trees/ha (trees with a diameter at breast height of >25 cm); however, our research indicates that these values should be increased to 20 m2/ha and 100 trees/ha, respectively. Given that a management plan is required when secondary forests become old-growth forests, many landowners avoid forest-stand development by engaging slash-and-burn agriculture or cattle grazing. We present evidence that deforestation and land degradation may prevent the natural regeneration of late-successional tree species of high ecological and economic importance. Moreover, we discuss the results of this study in the light of an ongoing debate in the Yucatan Peninsula between policy makers, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), landowners and researchers, regarding the modification of this regulation to redefine the concept of acahual (secondary forest) and to facilitate forest management and restoration with valuable timber tree species.The Mexican Forest Code establishes structural reference values to differentiate between secondary and old-growth forests and requires a management plan when secondary forests become old-growth and potentially harvestable forests. The implications of this regulation for forest management, restoration, and conservation were assessed in the context of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, which is located in the Yucatan Peninsula. The basal area and stem density thresholds currently used by the legislation to differentiate old-growth from secondary forests are 4 m2/ha and 15 trees/ha (trees with a diameter at breast height of >25 cm); however, our research indicates that these values should be increased to 20 m2/ha and 100 trees/ha, respectively. Given that a management plan is required when secondary forests become old-growth forests, many landowners avoid forest-stand development by engaging slash-and-burn agriculture or cattle grazing. We present evidence that deforestation and land degradation may prevent the natural regeneration of late-successional tree species of high ecological and economic importance. Moreover, we discuss the results of this study in the light of an ongoing debate in the Yucatan Peninsula between policy makers, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), landowners and researchers, regarding the modification of this regulation to redefine the concept of acahual (secondary forest) and to facilitate forest management and restoration with valuable timber tree species.Ley General de Desarrollo Forestal Sustentable (México)Bosque secundarioOrdenación forestalRestauración forestalConservación de bosquesArtfrosurForestshttp://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/5/5/978/htmAcceso en línea sin restricciones
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Ley General de Desarrollo Forestal Sustentable (México)
Bosque secundario
Ordenación forestal
Restauración forestal
Conservación de bosques
Artfrosur
Ley General de Desarrollo Forestal Sustentable (México)
Bosque secundario
Ordenación forestal
Restauración forestal
Conservación de bosques
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Ley General de Desarrollo Forestal Sustentable (México)
Bosque secundario
Ordenación forestal
Restauración forestal
Conservación de bosques
Artfrosur
Ley General de Desarrollo Forestal Sustentable (México)
Bosque secundario
Ordenación forestal
Restauración forestal
Conservación de bosques
Artfrosur
Román Dañobeytia, Francisco José autor 12560
Levy Tacher, Samuel Israel Doctor autor 6877
Macario Mendoza, Pedro A. Doctor autor 2047
Zúñiga Morales, José Adalberto autor
Redefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation
description The Mexican Forest Code establishes structural reference values to differentiate between secondary and old-growth forests and requires a management plan when secondary forests become old-growth and potentially harvestable forests. The implications of this regulation for forest management, restoration, and conservation were assessed in the context of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, which is located in the Yucatan Peninsula. The basal area and stem density thresholds currently used by the legislation to differentiate old-growth from secondary forests are 4 m2/ha and 15 trees/ha (trees with a diameter at breast height of >25 cm); however, our research indicates that these values should be increased to 20 m2/ha and 100 trees/ha, respectively. Given that a management plan is required when secondary forests become old-growth forests, many landowners avoid forest-stand development by engaging slash-and-burn agriculture or cattle grazing. We present evidence that deforestation and land degradation may prevent the natural regeneration of late-successional tree species of high ecological and economic importance. Moreover, we discuss the results of this study in the light of an ongoing debate in the Yucatan Peninsula between policy makers, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), landowners and researchers, regarding the modification of this regulation to redefine the concept of acahual (secondary forest) and to facilitate forest management and restoration with valuable timber tree species.
format Texto
topic_facet Ley General de Desarrollo Forestal Sustentable (México)
Bosque secundario
Ordenación forestal
Restauración forestal
Conservación de bosques
Artfrosur
author Román Dañobeytia, Francisco José autor 12560
Levy Tacher, Samuel Israel Doctor autor 6877
Macario Mendoza, Pedro A. Doctor autor 2047
Zúñiga Morales, José Adalberto autor
author_facet Román Dañobeytia, Francisco José autor 12560
Levy Tacher, Samuel Israel Doctor autor 6877
Macario Mendoza, Pedro A. Doctor autor 2047
Zúñiga Morales, José Adalberto autor
author_sort Román Dañobeytia, Francisco José autor 12560
title Redefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation
title_short Redefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation
title_full Redefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation
title_fullStr Redefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation
title_full_unstemmed Redefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation
title_sort redefining secondary forests in the mexican forest code implications for management, restoration, and conservation
url http://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/5/5/978/htm
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