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20. Where Should Natural Forest Management Be Promoted to Conserve Wildlife?

  • Peter C. Frumhoff and Elizabeth C. Losos
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The Cutting Edge
This chapter is in the book The Cutting Edge

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Preface xiii
  5. Contributors xvii
  6. Part I. An Introduction to Forestry-Wildlife Interactions in Tropical Forests
  7. 1. Logging-Wildlife Issues in the Tropics: An Overview 7
  8. 2. Tropical Forest Management and Wildlife: Silvicultural Effects on Forest Structure, Fruit Production, and Locomotion of Arboreal Animals 11
  9. 3. Logging, Seed Dispersal by Vertebrates, and Natural Regeneration of Tropical Timber Trees 35
  10. Part II. Wildlife and Chainsaws: Direct Impacts of Logging on Wildlife
  11. Introduction 62
  12. 4. Changes in Primate Communities Following Logging Disturbance 71
  13. 5. The Effects of Logging on Tropical Forest Ungulates 93
  14. 6. The Effects of Logging on Nonvolant Small Mammal Communities in Neotropical Rainforests 125
  15. 7. The Consequences of Timber Exploitation for Bat Communities in Tropical America 153
  16. 8. Tropical Forestry and the Conservation of Neotropical Birds 167
  17. 9. The Effects of Logging on Birds in Tropical Forests of Indo-Australia 193
  18. 10. Bird Communities in Logged and Unlogged African Forests: Lessons from Uganda and Beyond 213
  19. 11. The Effects of Logging on Reptiles and Amphibians of Tropical Forests 239
  20. 12. The Impacts of Selective Logging on Tropical Forest Invertebrates 261
  21. 13. Soil Fauna in Managed Forests: Lessons from the Luquillo Experimental Forest, Puerto Rico 289
  22. 14. The Effects of Logging on Tropical River Ecosystems 305
  23. Part III. Hunting: A Major Indirect Impact of Logging on Game Species
  24. Introduction 328
  25. 15. Logging and Hunting in Community Forests and Corporate Concessions: Two Contrasting Case Studies in Bolivia 333
  26. 16. The Interrelationships of Commercial Logging, Hunting, and Wildlife in Sarawak: Recommendations for Forest Management 359
  27. 17. Defaunation, Not Deforestation: Commercial Logging and Market Hunting in Northern Congo 375
  28. Part IV. Research to Integrate Natural Forest Management and Wildlife Conservation
  29. Introduction 402
  30. 18. Natural Forest Management and Biodiversity Conservation: Field Study Design and Integration at the Operational Level 405
  31. 19. Programs to Assess the Impacts of Timber Harvesting on Tropical Forest Wildlife and Their Habitat 423
  32. Part V. Forest Management Programs to Conserve Wildlife in Production Forest Landscapes
  33. Introduction
  34. 20. Where Should Natural Forest Management Be Promoted to Conserve Wildlife? 453
  35. 21. Reducing the Impacts of Tropical Forestry on Wildlife 473
  36. 22. An Evolutionary Perspective on Natural Disturbance and Logging: Implications for Forest Management and Habitat Restoration 511
  37. 23. Protecting Habitat Elements and Natural Areas in the Managed Forest Matrix 523
  38. 24. Logging and Wildlife Research in Australasia Implications for Tropical Forest Management 559
  39. 25. Community-Based Timber Production: A Viable Strategy for Promoting Wildlife Conservation? 575
  40. Part VI. Incentives for Integrating Natural Forest Management and Wildlife Conservation
  41. Introduction 596
  42. 26. Tropical Forest Management Certification and Wildlife Conservation 601
  43. 27. Can Forestry Carbon-Offset Projects Play a Significant Role in Conserving Forest 615
  44. 28. The Economics of Sustainable Forest Management and Wildlife Conservation in Tropical Forests 635
  45. 29. Rain Forest Logging and Wildlife Use in Bolivia: Management and Conservation in Transition 649
  46. Part VII. Synopsis
  47. 30. Logging and Wildlife in the Tropics: Impacts and Options for Conservation 667
  48. Literature Cited 697
  49. Index 777
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