Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Margaret Nyafwono"'
Autor:
Eveliina Korkiatupa, Geoffrey M. Malinga, Ryosuke Nakadai, Margaret Nyafwono, Perpetra Akite, Sille Holm, Wouter van Goor, Richard Kigenyi, Anu Valtonen
Publikováno v:
Ecosphere, Vol 14, Iss 5, Pp n/a-n/a (2023)
Abstract Restoration of forests is now considered an essential tool to combat climate change and the global biodiversity decline. However, our understanding of how animal communities recover after restoration interventions in tropical forests is limi
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/40955b3cc0bd454bae0f4bf6b960401f
Autor:
Ryosuke Nakadai, Joseph Oloya, Anu Valtonen, Perpetra Akite, Geoffrey M. Malinga, Margaret Nyafwono, Sille Holm
Publikováno v:
Forest Ecology and Management. 491:119087
Understanding of how biodiversity can recover after anthropogenic disturbances, such as selective logging, is important for planning conservation strategies for tropical forests and for more sustainable timber harvest regimes. However, the knowledge
Autor:
Margaret Nyafwono, Heikki Roininen, Geoffrey M. Malinga, Anu Valtonen, Philip Nyeko, Arthur A. Owiny
Publikováno v:
Journal of Tropical Ecology. 33:12-21
The relative importance of different bottom-up-mediated effects in shaping insect communities in tropical secondary forests are poorly understood. Here, we explore the roles of vegetation structure, forest age, local topography (valley vs. hill top)
Publikováno v:
Biodiversity and Conservation. 24:1473-1485
Anthropogenic disturbances have led to a dramatic loss of biodiversity in the tropics. Habitat restoration can mitigate biodiversity loss but studies describing insect community recovery during tropical forest restoration are limited in Africa. Our a
Publikováno v:
Biological Conservation. 174:75-83
There is scarcity of information pertaining to insect colonisation during forest restoration in the tropics. We investigated the pattern and timescale of butterfly recovery along a gradient of forest restoration in an Afro-tropical moist forest in Ki
Publikováno v:
Biotropica. 46:210-218
Knowledge of the recovery of insect communities after forest disturbance in tropical Africa is very limited. Here, fruit-feeding butterflies in a tropical rain forest at Kibale National Park, Uganda, were used as a model system to uncover how, and ho