Southeast Asia experiences one of the highest rates of deforestation in the tropics due to agricultural expansion, logging, habitat fragmentation and urbanization, which are expected to result in species declines and extinctions. In particular, growing global demands for food, biofuel and other commodities are driving the rapid expansion of oil palm and paper-and-pulp industries at the expense of lowland dipterocarp forests, further jeopardizing Southeast Asian forest biotas. We synthesize recent findings on the effects of land-use changes on plants, invertebrates, vertebrates and ecosystem functioning/services in Southeast Asia. We find that species richness and abundance/density of forest-dependent taxa generally declined in disturbed com...
Tropical forests throughout the world are rapidly being converted to agriculture. Remaining forests ...
Over the last few decades, oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) agriculture in Southeast Asia has created ne...
Human-driven land-use changes increasingly threaten biodiversity, particularly in tropical forests w...
Southeast Asia was almost entirely covered by rainforest 8,000 years ago. Today, this region is expe...
In 2004, Navjot Sodhi and colleagues warned that logging and agricultural conversion of Southeast As...
First published online in 2009Southeast Asia is a region of conservation concern due to heavy losses...
Southeast Asia, which encompasses four biodiversity hotspots (Indo-Burma, Sundaland, the Philippines...
The impacts of tropical deforestation and forest degradation on SE Asia's biotas have been documente...
The conversion of natural forest to oil palm plantation is a major current threat to the conservatio...
Southeast Asia, which encompasses four biodiversity hotspots (Indo-Burma, Sundaland, the Philippines...
International audienceTree diversity in Asia’s tropical and subtropical forests is central to nature...
Oil palm is one of the world's most rapidly expanding equatorial crops. The two largest oil palm-pro...
Southeast Asian rainforests have, in recent decades, experienced the highest rates of deforestation ...
Southeast Asia has the highest relative rate of deforestation of any major tropical region, and coul...
Within the last few decades Southeast Asian tropical peat-swamp forests have been increasingly bette...
Tropical forests throughout the world are rapidly being converted to agriculture. Remaining forests ...
Over the last few decades, oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) agriculture in Southeast Asia has created ne...
Human-driven land-use changes increasingly threaten biodiversity, particularly in tropical forests w...
Southeast Asia was almost entirely covered by rainforest 8,000 years ago. Today, this region is expe...
In 2004, Navjot Sodhi and colleagues warned that logging and agricultural conversion of Southeast As...
First published online in 2009Southeast Asia is a region of conservation concern due to heavy losses...
Southeast Asia, which encompasses four biodiversity hotspots (Indo-Burma, Sundaland, the Philippines...
The impacts of tropical deforestation and forest degradation on SE Asia's biotas have been documente...
The conversion of natural forest to oil palm plantation is a major current threat to the conservatio...
Southeast Asia, which encompasses four biodiversity hotspots (Indo-Burma, Sundaland, the Philippines...
International audienceTree diversity in Asia’s tropical and subtropical forests is central to nature...
Oil palm is one of the world's most rapidly expanding equatorial crops. The two largest oil palm-pro...
Southeast Asian rainforests have, in recent decades, experienced the highest rates of deforestation ...
Southeast Asia has the highest relative rate of deforestation of any major tropical region, and coul...
Within the last few decades Southeast Asian tropical peat-swamp forests have been increasingly bette...
Tropical forests throughout the world are rapidly being converted to agriculture. Remaining forests ...
Over the last few decades, oil palm (Elaeis guineensis) agriculture in Southeast Asia has created ne...
Human-driven land-use changes increasingly threaten biodiversity, particularly in tropical forests w...