Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore

Forest fragments are increasingly common in the tropics as pristine forests are cleared. Fragments stranded within cities are especially stress-prone due to their greatly altered environment and high human impacts. We review biodiversity and ecological studies from Bukit Timah, a tropical forest fra...

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Main Authors: Lum, Shawn, Ngo, Kang Min
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159381
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1593812022-06-16T05:43:03Z Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore Lum, Shawn Ngo, Kang Min Asian School of the Environment Science::Biological sciences::Ecology Tropical Forest Fragments Defaunation Forest fragments are increasingly common in the tropics as pristine forests are cleared. Fragments stranded within cities are especially stress-prone due to their greatly altered environment and high human impacts. We review biodiversity and ecological studies from Bukit Timah, a tropical forest fragment in Singapore, to ask how this forest has contributed to our understanding of tropical ecology and fragmentation effects, and list the conservation values of this forest. Evidence from Amazonian fragments predicts that losses in diversity and forest function follow fragmentation, and although Bukit Timah has adhered to some of those predictions, other aspects of the forest appeared remarkably resilient. As might be expected, declines in plant, invertebrate, bird, and mammal diversity occurred not only historically but also across two surveys made about 20 years apart. In other ways Bukit Timah proved surprising. Aboveground biomass fluctuated but did not plummet drastically, and was comparable to levels found in primary forests in the region. The extirpation of large fauna did not appear to reduce the dispersal of large seeded plant species, likely due to continued dispersal by small-mammals and birds. Exotic tree species are confined to recovering secondary forest fringes and do not threaten the primary forest, except for perhaps shade tolerant Pará rubber and a handful of cultivated fruit trees. Studies of birds and plants found that life history differences could account for differences in genetic connectivity or isolation for different species, with population genetic implications for other taxa. Despite being a small fragment, new species of plants and animals continue to be discovered or re-discovered. Clearly, there are reasons to celebrate Bukit Timah as a forest fragment that withstood two centuries of human impacts. Nonetheless, many measures can be implemented to better secure its future. 2022-06-16T05:43:03Z 2022-06-16T05:43:03Z 2021 Journal Article Lum, S. & Ngo, K. M. (2021). Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore. Biological Conservation, 254, 108847-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108847 0006-3207 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159381 10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108847 2-s2.0-85099233337 254 108847 en Biological Conservation © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences::Ecology
Tropical Forest Fragments
Defaunation
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences::Ecology
Tropical Forest Fragments
Defaunation
Lum, Shawn
Ngo, Kang Min
Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore
description Forest fragments are increasingly common in the tropics as pristine forests are cleared. Fragments stranded within cities are especially stress-prone due to their greatly altered environment and high human impacts. We review biodiversity and ecological studies from Bukit Timah, a tropical forest fragment in Singapore, to ask how this forest has contributed to our understanding of tropical ecology and fragmentation effects, and list the conservation values of this forest. Evidence from Amazonian fragments predicts that losses in diversity and forest function follow fragmentation, and although Bukit Timah has adhered to some of those predictions, other aspects of the forest appeared remarkably resilient. As might be expected, declines in plant, invertebrate, bird, and mammal diversity occurred not only historically but also across two surveys made about 20 years apart. In other ways Bukit Timah proved surprising. Aboveground biomass fluctuated but did not plummet drastically, and was comparable to levels found in primary forests in the region. The extirpation of large fauna did not appear to reduce the dispersal of large seeded plant species, likely due to continued dispersal by small-mammals and birds. Exotic tree species are confined to recovering secondary forest fringes and do not threaten the primary forest, except for perhaps shade tolerant Pará rubber and a handful of cultivated fruit trees. Studies of birds and plants found that life history differences could account for differences in genetic connectivity or isolation for different species, with population genetic implications for other taxa. Despite being a small fragment, new species of plants and animals continue to be discovered or re-discovered. Clearly, there are reasons to celebrate Bukit Timah as a forest fragment that withstood two centuries of human impacts. Nonetheless, many measures can be implemented to better secure its future.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Lum, Shawn
Ngo, Kang Min
format Article
author Lum, Shawn
Ngo, Kang Min
author_sort Lum, Shawn
title Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore
title_short Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore
title_full Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore
title_fullStr Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in Singapore
title_sort lessons in ecology and conservation from a tropical forest fragment in singapore
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159381
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