Browsing by Subject "Tropical"
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Item Open Access Gabon’s Overlooked Carbon: A tropical forest study of coarse woody debris(2013-04-26) Carlson, BenLarge dead trees and other large forest detritus (collectively known as coarse woody debris, or CWD) play an important role in the global carbon cycle. In tropical systems, CWD stocks (necromass) have been found to constitute 5% to 33% of total biomass. Despite harboring the second largest rain forest on earth, in Central Africa there have been virtually no studies of coarse woody debris. In this study 15 plots were established in 5 forest zones in Gabon, Africa to measure CWD stocks and potential environmental and land-use determinants of CWD. Necromass of CWD was found to be positively correlated with precipitation and was higher in logged forests than in primary forests. Extrapolated to the entire country, Gabon is estimated to contain carbon CWD content of between 0.34 Pg C to 0.72 Pg C (14 Mg C ha-1 to 30.1 Mg C ha-1). The results of this study will help improve tropical forest carbon flux estimates.Item Open Access Viability and improvement of constructive wildlife corridors in tropical forests, proposing a new method for evaluating corridors geospatially using MaxEnt(2022-12-14) Markus, CaitlinHabitat corridor ecology remains a new and developing field in wildlife and forest management. Little is known about how corridors statistically work or how they should be established and monitored. Stuart Pimm and his non-profit Saving Nature build constructive habitat corridors in tropical forests, and he now hopes that the data collected from these corridors can contribute to the growing knowledge in this field. In this study, I analyzed camera trap data from Saving Nature’s corridors in Colombia, Ecuador, and Brazil. Occupancy models were run to determine general corridor efficiency based on the species detected in the camera traps and species that were expected to appear based on environmental variables. I also attempted to propose maximum entropy models as an alternative way to achieve the same goal. Finally, least cost path corridor models were run to identify the areas animals are most likely to be found in, so that cameras can be repositioned to collect more data. Overall, all corridors were determined to be working adequately, but with room for improvement. MaxEntmodels show some potential as a method to evaluate corridor projects, but model refining and further research and development are required.