Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation

The uncontrolled logging in Peninsular Malaysia and the resulting mudslides in the lowland areas have been perilous, not to just humans, but also to another biodiversity, including the wild orchids. Their survival in these highly depleted areas is being overlooked due to the inaccessible and harsh e...

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Autores principales: Besi, Edward E., Nikong, Dome, Mustafa, Muskhazli, Go, Rusea
Formato: Online
Idioma:eng
Publicado: Universidad de Costa Rica 2019
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/38775
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institution Universidad de Costa Rica
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language eng
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author Besi, Edward E.
Nikong, Dome
Mustafa, Muskhazli
Go, Rusea
spellingShingle Besi, Edward E.
Nikong, Dome
Mustafa, Muskhazli
Go, Rusea
Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation
author_facet Besi, Edward E.
Nikong, Dome
Mustafa, Muskhazli
Go, Rusea
author_sort Besi, Edward E.
description The uncontrolled logging in Peninsular Malaysia and the resulting mudslides in the lowland areas have been perilous, not to just humans, but also to another biodiversity, including the wild orchids. Their survival in these highly depleted areas is being overlooked due to the inaccessible and harsh environment. This paper reports on the rescue of orchids at risk from the disturbed forests for ex-situ conservation, the identification of the diversity of orchids and the evaluation of the influence of micro-climatic changes induced by clear-cut logging towards the resilience of orchids in the flood-disturbed secondary forests and logged forests in Terengganu and Kelantan, located at the central region of Peninsular Malaysia, where the forest destruction by logging activities has been extensive. 109 orchid species belonging to 40 genera were collected from the disturbed areas. The diversity and data analyses show that the disturbed secondary forests had a higher orchid density (0.0133 plants/m2) than the logged sites (0.0040 plants/m2) as the habitat conditions were more dependable. Nevertheless, the logged forests harboured a higher diversity of orchids (H=4.50 and D=0.99) of which 97.9% were epiphytes. Eleven rare species were found along with six species endemic to Peninsular Malaysia, with two species new to science. The results highlighted the factors that allow the orchids to flourish or suffer in the disturbed forests. The logged forests had a higher ambient temperature and lower moisture level than the mud flood-disturbed and canopy-covered secondary forests. Apart from the extensive ground vegetation due to logs dragging extraction, low soil moisture and absence of leaf litter were believed to be the major attributes causing the low abundance of terrestrial orchids. The high abundance and diversity of epiphytic orchids and the large difference of their densities between the logged sites were influenced by the densities of fallen trees hosting orchid(s), disturbance-induced dryness stresses, durations of exposure to the anthropogenic-induced disturbance, and less favourable soil conditions for the terrestrial orchids.
title Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation
title_short Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation
title_full Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation
title_fullStr Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation
title_full_unstemmed Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation
title_sort orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation
title_alt Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation
publisher Universidad de Costa Rica
publishDate 2019
url https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/38775
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AT mustafamuskhazli orchiddiversityinantropogenicinduceddegradedtropicalrainforestanextrapolationtowardsconservation
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spelling LANKESTERIANA387752022-09-01T23:09:29Z Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation Orchid diversity in antropogenic-induced degraded tropical rainforest, an extrapolation towards conservation Besi, Edward E. Nikong, Dome Mustafa, Muskhazli Go, Rusea conservation diversity dryness stress ecology epiphyte logged forest mudslides Orchidaceae conservation diversity dryness stress ecology epiphyte logged forest mudslides Orchidaceae The uncontrolled logging in Peninsular Malaysia and the resulting mudslides in the lowland areas have been perilous, not to just humans, but also to another biodiversity, including the wild orchids. Their survival in these highly depleted areas is being overlooked due to the inaccessible and harsh environment. This paper reports on the rescue of orchids at risk from the disturbed forests for ex-situ conservation, the identification of the diversity of orchids and the evaluation of the influence of micro-climatic changes induced by clear-cut logging towards the resilience of orchids in the flood-disturbed secondary forests and logged forests in Terengganu and Kelantan, located at the central region of Peninsular Malaysia, where the forest destruction by logging activities has been extensive. 109 orchid species belonging to 40 genera were collected from the disturbed areas. The diversity and data analyses show that the disturbed secondary forests had a higher orchid density (0.0133 plants/m2) than the logged sites (0.0040 plants/m2) as the habitat conditions were more dependable. Nevertheless, the logged forests harboured a higher diversity of orchids (H=4.50 and D=0.99) of which 97.9% were epiphytes. Eleven rare species were found along with six species endemic to Peninsular Malaysia, with two species new to science. The results highlighted the factors that allow the orchids to flourish or suffer in the disturbed forests. The logged forests had a higher ambient temperature and lower moisture level than the mud flood-disturbed and canopy-covered secondary forests. Apart from the extensive ground vegetation due to logs dragging extraction, low soil moisture and absence of leaf litter were believed to be the major attributes causing the low abundance of terrestrial orchids. The high abundance and diversity of epiphytic orchids and the large difference of their densities between the logged sites were influenced by the densities of fallen trees hosting orchid(s), disturbance-induced dryness stresses, durations of exposure to the anthropogenic-induced disturbance, and less favourable soil conditions for the terrestrial orchids. The uncontrolled logging in Peninsular Malaysia and the resulting mudslides in the lowland areas have been perilous, not to just humans, but also to another biodiversity, including the wild orchids. Their survival in these highly depleted areas is being overlooked due to the inaccessible and harsh environment. This paper reports on the rescue of orchids at risk from the disturbed forests for ex-situ conservation, the identification of the diversity of orchids and the evaluation of the influence of micro-climatic changes induced by clear-cut logging towards the resilience of orchids in the flood-disturbed secondary forests and logged forests in Terengganu and Kelantan, located at the central region of Peninsular Malaysia, where the forest destruction by logging activities has been extensive. 109 orchid species belonging to 40 genera were collected from the disturbed areas. The diversity and data analyses show that the disturbed secondary forests had a higher orchid density (0.0133 plants/m2) than the logged sites (0.0040 plants/m2) as the habitat conditions were more dependable. Nevertheless, the logged forests harboured a higher diversity of orchids (H=4.50 and D=0.99) of which 97.9% were epiphytes. Eleven rare species were found along with six species endemic to Peninsular Malaysia, with two species new to science. The results highlighted the factors that allow the orchids to flourish or suffer in the disturbed forests. The logged forests had a higher ambient temperature and lower moisture level than the mud flood-disturbed and canopy-covered secondary forests. Apart from the extensive ground vegetation due to logs dragging extraction, low soil moisture and absence of leaf litter were believed to be the major attributes causing the low abundance of terrestrial orchids. The high abundance and diversity of epiphytic orchids and the large difference of their densities between the logged sites were influenced by the densities of fallen trees hosting orchid(s), disturbance-induced dryness stresses, durations of exposure to the anthropogenic-induced disturbance, and less favourable soil conditions for the terrestrial orchids. Universidad de Costa Rica 2019-08-27 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Article application/pdf https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/38775 10.15517/lank.v19i2.38775 Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology; 2019: Lankesteriana: Volume 19, Number 2; 107–124 Lankesteriana: International Journal on Orchidology; 2019: Lankesteriana: Volumen 19, Número 2; 107–124 2215-2067 1409-3871 eng https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/lankesteriana/article/view/38775/39480