Impact of Human Physical Disturbance on Mangrove Forest Structure at the Gazi Bay, Kenya.

Human physical disturbance is prevalent in mangrove forests of the Western Indian Ocean. This study investigated the impact of human physical disturbance on the structure of mangrove forests by comparing forest attributes such as density, taxon richness, stem diameter and tree height between disturbed and relatively undisturbed sites. Physical disturbance was evaluated through tree harvesting intensity, roads and footpaths and other human activities, such as digging for fish bait at the sites. Disturbed sites recorded significantly (ANOVA, P<0.001) higher tree cutting intensity than comparable undisturbed sites, corresponding to lower forest complexity and changes in dominant tree species. Disturbance increased prevalence of Avicennia marina and Ceriops tagal species at the landward margin of disturbed sites. Disturbed sites also recorded significantly lower abundance of harvestable trees and stand volume (223 stem.ha-1, 14.56 m3.ha-1, respectively) than undisturbed sites (288 stem.ha-1, 19.69 m3.ha-1, respectively). In addition, accessible sites recorded lower marketable trees, heights, pole size classes (mazio 4-6cm, boriti >10cm) and species (Rhizophora and Bruguiera), being dominated by juvenile and stunted Ceriops and Avicennia. These results indicate that overexploitation of mangrove forests affects the species composition and structural complexity of the forest and hence may impair forest functioning and regeneration and subsequently, sustainable exploitation. Thus, human physical disturbance leads to exponential decline in forest complexity and requires management intervention.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kihia, C.M.
Format: Journal Contribution biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:Mangroves, Abundance, Forests, Deforestation,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/6980
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-69802021-05-19T06:15:19Z Impact of Human Physical Disturbance on Mangrove Forest Structure at the Gazi Bay, Kenya. Kihia, C.M. Mangroves Abundance Forests Deforestation Human physical disturbance is prevalent in mangrove forests of the Western Indian Ocean. This study investigated the impact of human physical disturbance on the structure of mangrove forests by comparing forest attributes such as density, taxon richness, stem diameter and tree height between disturbed and relatively undisturbed sites. Physical disturbance was evaluated through tree harvesting intensity, roads and footpaths and other human activities, such as digging for fish bait at the sites. Disturbed sites recorded significantly (ANOVA, P<0.001) higher tree cutting intensity than comparable undisturbed sites, corresponding to lower forest complexity and changes in dominant tree species. Disturbance increased prevalence of Avicennia marina and Ceriops tagal species at the landward margin of disturbed sites. Disturbed sites also recorded significantly lower abundance of harvestable trees and stand volume (223 stem.ha-1, 14.56 m3.ha-1, respectively) than undisturbed sites (288 stem.ha-1, 19.69 m3.ha-1, respectively). In addition, accessible sites recorded lower marketable trees, heights, pole size classes (mazio 4-6cm, boriti >10cm) and species (Rhizophora and Bruguiera), being dominated by juvenile and stunted Ceriops and Avicennia. These results indicate that overexploitation of mangrove forests affects the species composition and structural complexity of the forest and hence may impair forest functioning and regeneration and subsequently, sustainable exploitation. Thus, human physical disturbance leads to exponential decline in forest complexity and requires management intervention. Published 2015-07-29T11:44:02Z 2015-07-29T11:44:02Z 2014 Journal Contribution Not Known 2073 - 8277 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/6980 en pp.31-47 Kenya, Coast, Kwale, Gazi Bay
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Mangroves
Abundance
Forests
Deforestation
Mangroves
Abundance
Forests
Deforestation
spellingShingle Mangroves
Abundance
Forests
Deforestation
Mangroves
Abundance
Forests
Deforestation
Kihia, C.M.
Impact of Human Physical Disturbance on Mangrove Forest Structure at the Gazi Bay, Kenya.
description Human physical disturbance is prevalent in mangrove forests of the Western Indian Ocean. This study investigated the impact of human physical disturbance on the structure of mangrove forests by comparing forest attributes such as density, taxon richness, stem diameter and tree height between disturbed and relatively undisturbed sites. Physical disturbance was evaluated through tree harvesting intensity, roads and footpaths and other human activities, such as digging for fish bait at the sites. Disturbed sites recorded significantly (ANOVA, P<0.001) higher tree cutting intensity than comparable undisturbed sites, corresponding to lower forest complexity and changes in dominant tree species. Disturbance increased prevalence of Avicennia marina and Ceriops tagal species at the landward margin of disturbed sites. Disturbed sites also recorded significantly lower abundance of harvestable trees and stand volume (223 stem.ha-1, 14.56 m3.ha-1, respectively) than undisturbed sites (288 stem.ha-1, 19.69 m3.ha-1, respectively). In addition, accessible sites recorded lower marketable trees, heights, pole size classes (mazio 4-6cm, boriti >10cm) and species (Rhizophora and Bruguiera), being dominated by juvenile and stunted Ceriops and Avicennia. These results indicate that overexploitation of mangrove forests affects the species composition and structural complexity of the forest and hence may impair forest functioning and regeneration and subsequently, sustainable exploitation. Thus, human physical disturbance leads to exponential decline in forest complexity and requires management intervention.
format Journal Contribution
topic_facet Mangroves
Abundance
Forests
Deforestation
author Kihia, C.M.
author_facet Kihia, C.M.
author_sort Kihia, C.M.
title Impact of Human Physical Disturbance on Mangrove Forest Structure at the Gazi Bay, Kenya.
title_short Impact of Human Physical Disturbance on Mangrove Forest Structure at the Gazi Bay, Kenya.
title_full Impact of Human Physical Disturbance on Mangrove Forest Structure at the Gazi Bay, Kenya.
title_fullStr Impact of Human Physical Disturbance on Mangrove Forest Structure at the Gazi Bay, Kenya.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Human Physical Disturbance on Mangrove Forest Structure at the Gazi Bay, Kenya.
title_sort impact of human physical disturbance on mangrove forest structure at the gazi bay, kenya.
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/6980
work_keys_str_mv AT kihiacm impactofhumanphysicaldisturbanceonmangroveforeststructureatthegazibaykenya
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