In 2004, Navjot Sodhi and colleagues warned that logging and agricultural conversion of Southeast Asia's forests were leading to a biodiversity disaster. We evaluate this prediction against subsequent research and conclude that most of the fauna of the region can persist in logged forests. Conversely, conversion of primary or logged forests to plantation crops, such as oil palm, causes tremendous biodiversity loss. This loss is exacerbated by increased fire frequency. Therefore, we conclude that preventing agricultural conversion of logged forests is essential to conserving the biodiversity of this region. Our analysis also suggests that, because Southeast Asian forests are tightly tied to global commodity markets, conservation payments com...
International audienceTree diversity in Asia’s tropical and subtropical forests is central to nature...
Strong global demand for tropical timber and agricultural products has driven large-scale logging an...
Southeast Asia, which encompasses four biodiversity hotspots (Indo-Burma, Sundaland, the Philippines...
In 2004, Navjot Sodhi and colleagues warned that logging and agricultural conversion of Southeast As...
Southeast Asia experiences one of the highest rates of deforestation in the tropics due to agricultu...
Oil palm is one of the world's most rapidly expanding equatorial crops. The two largest oil palm-pro...
Strong global demand for tropical timber and agricultural products has driven large-scale logging an...
Southeast Asia was almost entirely covered by rainforest 8,000 years ago. Today, this region is expe...
Southeast Asia has the highest relative rate of deforestation of any major tropical region, and coul...
Tropical forests throughout the world are rapidly being converted to agriculture. Remaining forests ...
Tropical deforestation is leading to a loss of economically productive timber concessions, as well a...
Tropical deforestation is leading to a loss of economically productive timber concessions, as well a...
The island of Borneo is a biodiversity hotspot of global importance that continues to suffer from on...
[Extract] Primary tropical forests are powerhouses of biodiversity but are rapidly declining in exte...
The island of Borneo is a biodiversity hotspot of global importance that continues to suffer from on...
International audienceTree diversity in Asia’s tropical and subtropical forests is central to nature...
Strong global demand for tropical timber and agricultural products has driven large-scale logging an...
Southeast Asia, which encompasses four biodiversity hotspots (Indo-Burma, Sundaland, the Philippines...
In 2004, Navjot Sodhi and colleagues warned that logging and agricultural conversion of Southeast As...
Southeast Asia experiences one of the highest rates of deforestation in the tropics due to agricultu...
Oil palm is one of the world's most rapidly expanding equatorial crops. The two largest oil palm-pro...
Strong global demand for tropical timber and agricultural products has driven large-scale logging an...
Southeast Asia was almost entirely covered by rainforest 8,000 years ago. Today, this region is expe...
Southeast Asia has the highest relative rate of deforestation of any major tropical region, and coul...
Tropical forests throughout the world are rapidly being converted to agriculture. Remaining forests ...
Tropical deforestation is leading to a loss of economically productive timber concessions, as well a...
Tropical deforestation is leading to a loss of economically productive timber concessions, as well a...
The island of Borneo is a biodiversity hotspot of global importance that continues to suffer from on...
[Extract] Primary tropical forests are powerhouses of biodiversity but are rapidly declining in exte...
The island of Borneo is a biodiversity hotspot of global importance that continues to suffer from on...
International audienceTree diversity in Asia’s tropical and subtropical forests is central to nature...
Strong global demand for tropical timber and agricultural products has driven large-scale logging an...
Southeast Asia, which encompasses four biodiversity hotspots (Indo-Burma, Sundaland, the Philippines...