Authors
Carlos A Peres, Toby A Gardner, Jos Barlow, Jansen Zuanon, Fernanda Michalski, Alexander C Lees, Ima CG Vieira, Fatima MS Moreira, Kenneth J Feeley
Publication date
2010/10/1
Journal
Biological conservation
Volume
143
Issue
10
Pages
2314-2327
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Amazonia (sensu lato) is by far the largest tropical forest region, but has succumbed to the highest absolute rates of tropical deforestation and forest degradation, driven by rapid frontier expansion, road-building, and spontaneous or government-subsidized migration. The large area-through-time and paleo-climatic stability of Amazonian forests may help explain the high regional to local scale plant and animal species diversity of true forest specialists and high ecological sensitivity to contemporary land-use change. We describe the prevailing forms of anthropogenic disturbance that affect forest organisms in the context of the geographic and evolutionary background that has shaped the degree to which forest species may be resilient to environmental change. The fate of Amazonian biodiversity will partly depend upon the interaction between land-use and climate change, and the extent to which seasonally-dry …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CA Peres, TA Gardner, J Barlow, J Zuanon, F Michalski… - Biological conservation, 2010