Secondary vegetation provides a reservoir of non-timber forest products and agroforestry service options for forestry plantation systems, Maputaland, South Africa

A. Starke, C. Geldenhuys, Tim G. O’Connor, Colin S. Everson
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Abstract

Tree species providing non-timber forest products (NTFPs) have the potential to enhance the socio-economic value of forestry plantation systems and mitigate biodiversity loss associated with production landscapes in Southern Africa. This can be accomplished by integrating NTFP agroforestry systems with forestry plantation systems but raises questions around which species and products are suited to the different environments that exist within large plantation systems or plantation landscapes. These questions can be answered by assessing the NTFP and agroforestry system (AFS) value of native species that form part of secondary vegetation within forestry plantations by shedding light on the disturbance regimes and environmental conditions that NTFP species prefer. This study assessed the NTFP value of secondary vegetation growing within abandoned clear-felled and abandoned unharvested forestry compartments. It addressed differences between the NTFP value of secondary vegetation and natural forest while providing options for how native species could be integrated into a forestry plantation system using agroforestry. We found that secondary vegetation growing in abandoned compartments provided roughly two-thirds of the NTFP uses provided by natural forest. The state of the compartment at the time of abandonment influenced which NTFPs were available. Secondary woodland developing in clear-felled compartments contained NTFPs which were associated with fire-adapted woodland species (e.g. fruit and oils from Marula trees). Naturalising forest in unfelled plantation compartments contained a composition of NTFPs associated with the provision of wood products. Our results show that native vegetation growing as secondary vegetation in forestry plantation systems has the potential to guide the development of native species agro-forestry systems and, in general, can contribute to a more formalised approach for integrating NTFP supply in forestry plantation systems.
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次生植被为林业种植系统提供了非木材森林产品和农林服务选择,南非马普塔兰德
提供非木材森林产品 (NTFP) 的树种有可能提高林业种植系统的社会经济价值,并减轻南部非洲生产景观相关的生物多样性损失。这可以通过将非木材林产品农林系统与林业种植系统相结合来实现,但这也提出了有关哪些树种和产品适合大型种植系统或种植景观中存在的不同环境的问题。这些问题可以通过评估构成林业种植园次生植被一部分的本地物种的 NTFP 和农林系统 (AFS) 价值,揭示 NTFP 物种偏好的干扰机制和环境条件来解答。这项研究评估了生长在废弃清伐林区和废弃未采伐林区的次生植被的 NTFP 价值。该研究探讨了次生植被与天然林之间的 NTFP 价值差异,同时为如何利用农林业将本地物种纳入人工林系统提供了方案。我们发现,生长在废弃林分中的次生植被所提供的非物质森林资源约占天然林所提供的非物质森林资源的三分之二。废弃区块在废弃时的状况影响了哪些非物质森林产品可以利用。在已砍伐林分中生长的次生林地含有与适应火灾的林地物种有关的 NTFP(如 Marula 树的果实和油)。在未砍伐的人工林地块中的归化林含有与提供木制品有关的非物质森林产品。我们的研究结果表明,在人工林系统中作为次生植被生长的本地植被有可能指导本地物种农林系统的发展,总体而言,有助于采用更正规的方法将非物质森林产品供应纳入人工林系统。
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