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Primary Tropical Forests Are Best But Regrowing Forests Are Also Vital to Biodiversity

October 04, 2018 |

By Kati Fleming [CC BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0)], from Wikimedia Commons

This article was originally published on Phys.org 


“Even after 40 years of recovery, secondary forests remain species and carbon-poor compared to undisturbed primary forests, a new study reveals. However these secondary forests—forests regrowing in previously deforested areas—are still vitally important to  conservation and  storage, argue scientists.

Housing much of Earth’s carbon and biodiversity,  are, arguably, the planet’s most important ecosystems. Yet, they continue to be destroyed by humans at an alarming rate, with devastating implications for  and the world’s species.

An international team of scientists from Europe, Brazil and Australia, measured carbon and surveyed more than 1,600 plant, bird and dung beetle species in 59 naturally regenerating secondary forests and 30 undisturbed primary forests in the eastern Amazon.

Their study, published today in the leading journal Global Change Biology, shows that primary forests contain more biodiversity and carbon than even mature regenerating forests. The study authors argue this means protecting primary forests should be a conservation priority…”

Read on at: Phys.org

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