Comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: A multi-taxa fauna approach.

Tropical forest restoration initiatives are becoming more frequent worldwide in an effort to mitigate biodiversity loss and ecosystems degradation. However, there is little consensus on whether an active or a passive restoration strategy is more successful for recovering biodiversity because few stu...

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Main Authors: Juan Manuel Díaz-García, Fabiola López-Barrera, Eduardo Pineda, Tarin Toledo-Aceves, Ellen Andresen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242020
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spelling doaj-7fff6ef73d9d42ebbfb16ca3134bb74b2021-03-04T12:28:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011511e024202010.1371/journal.pone.0242020Comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: A multi-taxa fauna approach.Juan Manuel Díaz-GarcíaFabiola López-BarreraEduardo PinedaTarin Toledo-AcevesEllen AndresenTropical forest restoration initiatives are becoming more frequent worldwide in an effort to mitigate biodiversity loss and ecosystems degradation. However, there is little consensus on whether an active or a passive restoration strategy is more successful for recovering biodiversity because few studies make adequate comparisons. Furthermore, studies on animal responses to restoration are scarce compared to those on plants, and those that assess faunal recovery often focus on a single taxon, limiting the generalization of results. We assessed the success of active (native mixed-species plantations) and passive (natural regeneration) tropical cloud forest restoration strategies based on the responses of three animal taxa: amphibians, ants, and dung beetles. We compared community attributes of these three taxa in a 23-year-old active restoration forest, a 23-year-old passive restoration forest, a cattle pasture, and a mature forest, with emphasis on forest-specialist species. We also evaluated the relationship between faunal recovery and environmental variables. For all taxa, we found that recovery of species richness and composition were similar in active and passive restoration sites. However, recovery of forest specialists was enhanced through active restoration. For both forests under restoration, similarity in species composition of all faunal groups was 60-70% with respect to the reference ecosystem due to a replacement of generalist species by forest-specialist species. The recovery of faunal communities was mainly associated with canopy and leaf litter covers. We recommend implementing active restoration using mixed plantations of native tree species and, whenever possible, selecting sites close to mature forest to accelerate the recovery of tropical cloud forest biodiversity. As active restoration is more expensive than passive restoration, both strategies might be used in a complementary manner at the landscape level to compensate for high implementation costs.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242020
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan Manuel Díaz-García
Fabiola López-Barrera
Eduardo Pineda
Tarin Toledo-Aceves
Ellen Andresen
spellingShingle Juan Manuel Díaz-García
Fabiola López-Barrera
Eduardo Pineda
Tarin Toledo-Aceves
Ellen Andresen
Comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: A multi-taxa fauna approach.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Juan Manuel Díaz-García
Fabiola López-Barrera
Eduardo Pineda
Tarin Toledo-Aceves
Ellen Andresen
author_sort Juan Manuel Díaz-García
title Comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: A multi-taxa fauna approach.
title_short Comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: A multi-taxa fauna approach.
title_full Comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: A multi-taxa fauna approach.
title_fullStr Comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: A multi-taxa fauna approach.
title_full_unstemmed Comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: A multi-taxa fauna approach.
title_sort comparing the success of active and passive restoration in a tropical cloud forest landscape: a multi-taxa fauna approach.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Tropical forest restoration initiatives are becoming more frequent worldwide in an effort to mitigate biodiversity loss and ecosystems degradation. However, there is little consensus on whether an active or a passive restoration strategy is more successful for recovering biodiversity because few studies make adequate comparisons. Furthermore, studies on animal responses to restoration are scarce compared to those on plants, and those that assess faunal recovery often focus on a single taxon, limiting the generalization of results. We assessed the success of active (native mixed-species plantations) and passive (natural regeneration) tropical cloud forest restoration strategies based on the responses of three animal taxa: amphibians, ants, and dung beetles. We compared community attributes of these three taxa in a 23-year-old active restoration forest, a 23-year-old passive restoration forest, a cattle pasture, and a mature forest, with emphasis on forest-specialist species. We also evaluated the relationship between faunal recovery and environmental variables. For all taxa, we found that recovery of species richness and composition were similar in active and passive restoration sites. However, recovery of forest specialists was enhanced through active restoration. For both forests under restoration, similarity in species composition of all faunal groups was 60-70% with respect to the reference ecosystem due to a replacement of generalist species by forest-specialist species. The recovery of faunal communities was mainly associated with canopy and leaf litter covers. We recommend implementing active restoration using mixed plantations of native tree species and, whenever possible, selecting sites close to mature forest to accelerate the recovery of tropical cloud forest biodiversity. As active restoration is more expensive than passive restoration, both strategies might be used in a complementary manner at the landscape level to compensate for high implementation costs.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242020
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