Wild native trees in tropical homegardens of Southeast Mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management

Tropical homegardens (THGs) are a model system for rural development that may reconcile food production with social resilience and biodiversity conservation, particularly in rapidly changing landscapes. This study quantified the sink function of THGs for wild native trees in relation to tree cover fragmentation, garden management and household socio-economics. Abundance, richness and diversity of naturally established spared native trees were recorded for 59 rural THGs in Southeast Mexico, along a gradient of tree cover fragmentation. The majority of native species and individuals encountered in THGs had arrived naturally. Contrary to previous work, both the abundance and diversity of spared native trees increased with tree cover fragmentation. However, this sink function was strongly mediated by the type of garden management: lush, multi-layered gardens and gardens with few exotics and low labour input had more spared native trees of more species, while simple-structured gardens and gardens with high labour input and many exotic fruits had only few. Overall, the results indicate that tree cover fragmentation determines which species come in, and management determines how many of each stay. Our results clearly demonstrate that THGs are crucial sinks for wild native trees in deforested fragmented landscapes. THGs are ubiquitous, and could also be key sources for reforestation; here we coin homegarden-based natural regeneration as a new concept. Since garden management has a clear impact, further research is needed as to how socio-economic, cultural and ecological functions of THGs can be optimised in different landscape contexts.

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Main Authors: Rooduijn, Bastiaan autor, Bongers, Frans Doctor autor 22512, Van Der Wal, Hans Doctor autor 2020
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Huertos familiares, Árboles nativos, Paisajes fragmentados, Restauración del paisaje forestal, Conservación de la diversidad de las plantas, Artfrosur,
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167880917304620
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:58596
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:585962024-03-12T12:38:05ZWild native trees in tropical homegardens of Southeast Mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management Rooduijn, Bastiaan autor Bongers, Frans Doctor autor 22512 Van Der Wal, Hans Doctor autor 2020 textengTropical homegardens (THGs) are a model system for rural development that may reconcile food production with social resilience and biodiversity conservation, particularly in rapidly changing landscapes. This study quantified the sink function of THGs for wild native trees in relation to tree cover fragmentation, garden management and household socio-economics. Abundance, richness and diversity of naturally established spared native trees were recorded for 59 rural THGs in Southeast Mexico, along a gradient of tree cover fragmentation. The majority of native species and individuals encountered in THGs had arrived naturally. Contrary to previous work, both the abundance and diversity of spared native trees increased with tree cover fragmentation. However, this sink function was strongly mediated by the type of garden management: lush, multi-layered gardens and gardens with few exotics and low labour input had more spared native trees of more species, while simple-structured gardens and gardens with high labour input and many exotic fruits had only few. Overall, the results indicate that tree cover fragmentation determines which species come in, and management determines how many of each stay. Our results clearly demonstrate that THGs are crucial sinks for wild native trees in deforested fragmented landscapes. THGs are ubiquitous, and could also be key sources for reforestation; here we coin homegarden-based natural regeneration as a new concept. Since garden management has a clear impact, further research is needed as to how socio-economic, cultural and ecological functions of THGs can be optimised in different landscape contexts.Tropical homegardens (THGs) are a model system for rural development that may reconcile food production with social resilience and biodiversity conservation, particularly in rapidly changing landscapes. This study quantified the sink function of THGs for wild native trees in relation to tree cover fragmentation, garden management and household socio-economics. Abundance, richness and diversity of naturally established spared native trees were recorded for 59 rural THGs in Southeast Mexico, along a gradient of tree cover fragmentation. The majority of native species and individuals encountered in THGs had arrived naturally. Contrary to previous work, both the abundance and diversity of spared native trees increased with tree cover fragmentation. However, this sink function was strongly mediated by the type of garden management: lush, multi-layered gardens and gardens with few exotics and low labour input had more spared native trees of more species, while simple-structured gardens and gardens with high labour input and many exotic fruits had only few. Overall, the results indicate that tree cover fragmentation determines which species come in, and management determines how many of each stay. Our results clearly demonstrate that THGs are crucial sinks for wild native trees in deforested fragmented landscapes. THGs are ubiquitous, and could also be key sources for reforestation; here we coin homegarden-based natural regeneration as a new concept. Since garden management has a clear impact, further research is needed as to how socio-economic, cultural and ecological functions of THGs can be optimised in different landscape contexts.Huertos familiaresÁrboles nativosPaisajes fragmentadosRestauración del paisaje forestalConservación de la diversidad de las plantasArtfrosurAgriculture, Ecosystems and Environmenthttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167880917304620Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
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 Huertos familiares
Árboles nativos
Paisajes fragmentados
Restauración del paisaje forestal
Conservación de la diversidad de las plantas
Artfrosur
Huertos familiares
Árboles nativos
Paisajes fragmentados
Restauración del paisaje forestal
Conservación de la diversidad de las plantas
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Huertos familiares
Árboles nativos
Paisajes fragmentados
Restauración del paisaje forestal
Conservación de la diversidad de las plantas
Artfrosur
Huertos familiares
Árboles nativos
Paisajes fragmentados
Restauración del paisaje forestal
Conservación de la diversidad de las plantas
Artfrosur
Rooduijn, Bastiaan autor
Bongers, Frans Doctor autor 22512
Van Der Wal, Hans Doctor autor 2020
Wild native trees in tropical homegardens of Southeast Mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management
description Tropical homegardens (THGs) are a model system for rural development that may reconcile food production with social resilience and biodiversity conservation, particularly in rapidly changing landscapes. This study quantified the sink function of THGs for wild native trees in relation to tree cover fragmentation, garden management and household socio-economics. Abundance, richness and diversity of naturally established spared native trees were recorded for 59 rural THGs in Southeast Mexico, along a gradient of tree cover fragmentation. The majority of native species and individuals encountered in THGs had arrived naturally. Contrary to previous work, both the abundance and diversity of spared native trees increased with tree cover fragmentation. However, this sink function was strongly mediated by the type of garden management: lush, multi-layered gardens and gardens with few exotics and low labour input had more spared native trees of more species, while simple-structured gardens and gardens with high labour input and many exotic fruits had only few. Overall, the results indicate that tree cover fragmentation determines which species come in, and management determines how many of each stay. Our results clearly demonstrate that THGs are crucial sinks for wild native trees in deforested fragmented landscapes. THGs are ubiquitous, and could also be key sources for reforestation; here we coin homegarden-based natural regeneration as a new concept. Since garden management has a clear impact, further research is needed as to how socio-economic, cultural and ecological functions of THGs can be optimised in different landscape contexts.
format Texto
topic_facet Huertos familiares
Árboles nativos
Paisajes fragmentados
Restauración del paisaje forestal
Conservación de la diversidad de las plantas
Artfrosur
author Rooduijn, Bastiaan autor
Bongers, Frans Doctor autor 22512
Van Der Wal, Hans Doctor autor 2020
author_facet Rooduijn, Bastiaan autor
Bongers, Frans Doctor autor 22512
Van Der Wal, Hans Doctor autor 2020
author_sort Rooduijn, Bastiaan autor
title Wild native trees in tropical homegardens of Southeast Mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management
title_short Wild native trees in tropical homegardens of Southeast Mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management
title_full Wild native trees in tropical homegardens of Southeast Mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management
title_fullStr Wild native trees in tropical homegardens of Southeast Mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management
title_full_unstemmed Wild native trees in tropical homegardens of Southeast Mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management
title_sort wild native trees in tropical homegardens of southeast mexico fostered by fragmentation, mediated by management
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167880917304620
work_keys_str_mv AT rooduijnbastiaanautor wildnativetreesintropicalhomegardensofsoutheastmexicofosteredbyfragmentationmediatedbymanagement
AT bongersfransdoctorautor22512 wildnativetreesintropicalhomegardensofsoutheastmexicofosteredbyfragmentationmediatedbymanagement
AT vanderwalhansdoctorautor2020 wildnativetreesintropicalhomegardensofsoutheastmexicofosteredbyfragmentationmediatedbymanagement
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