Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia.

There is an increasing concern of alien species invading our tropical ecosystems because anthropogenic land use can create conditions in which non-native species thrive. This study is an assessment of bioinvasion using a quantitative survey of non-native plant species in floodplain secondary forests...

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Main Authors: Hashim , Nor Rasidah, Hughes, Francine, Bayliss-Smith, Tim
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: Thai Society of Higher Eduction Institutes on Environment 2010
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15829/1/Non.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15829/
http://www.tshe.org/ea/abstracts/2010_3-s_6.html
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
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spelling my.upm.eprints.158292015-09-15T01:32:25Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15829/ Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia. Hashim , Nor Rasidah Hughes, Francine Bayliss-Smith, Tim There is an increasing concern of alien species invading our tropical ecosystems because anthropogenic land use can create conditions in which non-native species thrive. This study is an assessment of bioinvasion using a quantitative survey of non-native plant species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia. The study area is known to have a long cultivation and settlement history that provides ample time for non-native species introduction. The survey results showed that introduced species constituted 23% of all the identified species, with seven species unique to riparian forest strips and eleven species unique to abandoned paddy fields and the remaining five species being shared between the two secondary forest types. There existed some habitat preferences amongst the species implying both secondary forests were potentially susceptible to bioinvasion. Fourteen species are also invasive elsewhere (PIER invasives) whereas fifteen species have acquired local uses such for traditional medicine and food products. The presence of these non-native species could alter native plant succession trajectory, and eventually leads to native species impoverishment if the exotics managed to outcompete the native species. As such, the findings of this study have a far-reaching application for the national biodiversity conservation efforts because it provides the required information on bioinvasion. Thai Society of Higher Eduction Institutes on Environment 2010 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15829/1/Non.pdf Hashim , Nor Rasidah and Hughes, Francine and Bayliss-Smith, Tim (2010) Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia. Environment Asia, 3 (Special Issue). pp. 43-49. ISSN 1906-1714 http://www.tshe.org/ea/abstracts/2010_3-s_6.html English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
description There is an increasing concern of alien species invading our tropical ecosystems because anthropogenic land use can create conditions in which non-native species thrive. This study is an assessment of bioinvasion using a quantitative survey of non-native plant species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia. The study area is known to have a long cultivation and settlement history that provides ample time for non-native species introduction. The survey results showed that introduced species constituted 23% of all the identified species, with seven species unique to riparian forest strips and eleven species unique to abandoned paddy fields and the remaining five species being shared between the two secondary forest types. There existed some habitat preferences amongst the species implying both secondary forests were potentially susceptible to bioinvasion. Fourteen species are also invasive elsewhere (PIER invasives) whereas fifteen species have acquired local uses such for traditional medicine and food products. The presence of these non-native species could alter native plant succession trajectory, and eventually leads to native species impoverishment if the exotics managed to outcompete the native species. As such, the findings of this study have a far-reaching application for the national biodiversity conservation efforts because it provides the required information on bioinvasion.
format Article
author Hashim , Nor Rasidah
Hughes, Francine
Bayliss-Smith, Tim
spellingShingle Hashim , Nor Rasidah
Hughes, Francine
Bayliss-Smith, Tim
Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia.
author_facet Hashim , Nor Rasidah
Hughes, Francine
Bayliss-Smith, Tim
author_sort Hashim , Nor Rasidah
title Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia.
title_short Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia.
title_full Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia.
title_fullStr Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia.
title_full_unstemmed Non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in Peninsular Malaysia.
title_sort non-native species in floodplain secondary forests in peninsular malaysia.
publisher Thai Society of Higher Eduction Institutes on Environment
publishDate 2010
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15829/1/Non.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/15829/
http://www.tshe.org/ea/abstracts/2010_3-s_6.html
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