Plant Species Diversity of Kenyan Coastal forests: Gaps of knowledge
Fungomeli, M., Frascaroli, F., Cianciaruso, M., Lelli, C. and Chiarucci, A. (2018). Plant Species Diversity of Kenyan Coastal forests: Gaps of knowledge. 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. doi: 10.17011/conference/eccb2018/109186
Tekijät
Päivämäärä
2018Tekijänoikeudet
© the Authors, 2018
The coastal eco-region of Kenya, Africa, is known for high levels of endemism on the African continent for plant and other taxa like birds, butterflies, and amphibians. The continued management and survival of these forests has been through different means such as government protection, traditional management of sacred forests, and local community engagement. Forest-adjacent communities have always relied heavily on forest resources for their livelihood. Currently, these forests are facing an increasing pressure from local economic development and surrounding urban expansion. Therefore a pressing challenge is to conciliate sustainable forest management with community needs. In some forests, butterfly farming was introduced as a management strategy to address this challenge. Experience so far shows that butterfly farming has been a viable approach for reshaping the community’s relation to the forest, supporting conservation, improving livelihoods , and creating social enterprises.
Overall, knowledge about status and trends of biodiversity is the baseline for enhancing conservation strategies. Plant diversity is the crucial factor for the ecosystem productivity and services of the coastal forests. This affects the ecological processes and ecosystem services they provide. There is therefore need for an update on the plant species checklists, their values on the forest and uses by forest reliant communities.
Here we investigated the knowledge status on plant species diversity, distribution, and plant conservation status across coastal forests in Kenya. The occurrences of more than 3,000 species were recorded in 16 patches of coastal forests. Due to lack of data and variation in sampling methods, data of species richness are affected by major biases across the national forest parks of Arabuko Sokoke Forest, Shimba Hills and sacred sites. Thus, there is an urgent need to assess and improve the knowledge base of Kenyan coastal forests biodiversity through standardized field sampling. Such information is needed to better guide forest management, conservation policy and human interventions at both local and regional scales.
Key words: Plant species diversity, coastal forests, forest management, local community engagement, Kenya
...
Julkaisija
Open Science Centre, University of JyväskyläKonferenssi
ECCB2018: 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. 12th - 15th of June 2018, Jyväskylä, Finland
Alkuperäislähde
https://peerageofscience.org/conference/eccb2018/109186/Metadata
Näytä kaikki kuvailutiedotKokoelmat
- ECCB 2018 [712]
Lisenssi
Samankaltainen aineisto
Näytetään aineistoja, joilla on samankaltainen nimeke tai asiasanat.
-
Forest Fire Monitoring-An Integrated Approach to Sustain Forest Bio-diversity.
Lemmen, Christian (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)Lack of appropriate forest spatial information has been a major challenge in Nepal. In the hilly and mountain regions of Nepal, forest fire is very common. Once there is a forest fire, there is loss of biodiversity including ... -
Urban forest soils harbour distinct and more diverse communities of bacteria and fungi compared to less disturbed forest soils
Scholier, Tiffany; Lavrinienko, Anton; Brila, Ilze; Tukalenko, Eugene; Hindström, Rasmus; Vasylenko, Andrii; Cayol, Claire; Ecke, Frauke; Singh, Navinder J.; Forsman, Jukka T.; Tolvanen, Anne; Matala, Juho; Huitu, Otso; Kallio, Eva R.; Koskela, Esa; Mappes, Tapio; Watts, Phillip C. (Wiley-Blackwell, 2023)Anthropogenic changes to land use drive concomitant changes in biodiversity, including that of the soil microbiota. However, it is not clear how increasing intensity of human disturbance is reflected in the soil microbial ... -
What does the science say? The diversity of methods to synthesize knowledge
Dicks, Lynn; Failler, Pierre; Ferretti, Johanna; Haddaway, Neal; Hernandez, Monica; Livoreil, Barbara; Mattsson, Brady; Randall, Nicola; Rodela, Romina; Saarikoski, Heli; Santamaria, Luis; Velizarova, Emiliya; Wittmer, Heidi; Young, Juliette (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)Effective, unbiased and transparent methods of knowledge synthesis are a crucial element of science-policy-society interactions. A vast and rapidly expanding body of knowledge is relevant to many policy decisions. This ... -
Beyond the fragmentation debate in forest planning: how do habitat amount and spatial arrangement matter for saproxylic beetle diversity?
Percel, Gwendoline; Laroche, Fabien; Bouget, Christophe (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)In managed forests, intensive silvicultural practices reduce the density/diversity of deadwood and tree microhabitats at the forest stand scale. This negatively affects biodiversity, especially saproxylic beetles which ... -
Conservation value of low-productive forests measured as the amount and diversity of dead wood and saproxylic beetles
Hämäläinen, Aino; Strengbom, Joachim; Ranius, Thomas (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)In many managed landscapes a major part of all remaining unmanaged land is low-productive. Low-productive land is also often over-represented within protected areas, as it is less expensive to set aside. Despite this the ...
Ellei toisin mainittu, julkisesti saatavilla olevia JYX-metatietoja (poislukien tiivistelmät) saa vapaasti uudelleenkäyttää CC0-lisenssillä.