Oligarchic Forests of Economic Plants in Amazonia: Utilization and Conservation of an Important Tropical Resource
- 1 December 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Conservation Biology
- Vol. 3 (4) , 341-349
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1739.1989.tb00240.x
Abstract
Tropical forests dominated by only one or two tree species occupy tens of millions of hectares in Amazonia In many cases, the dominant species produce fruits, seeds, or oils of economic importance. Oligarchic (Gr. oligo = few, archic = dominated or ruled by) forests of six economic species, i. e., Euterpe oleracea, Grias peruviana, Jessenia bataua, Mauritia flexuosa, Myrciaria dubia, and Orbignya phalerata, were studied in Brazil and Peru Natural populations of these species contain from 100 to 3,000 conspecific adult trees/ha and produce up to 11.1 metric tons of fruit/hd/yr. These plant populations are utilized and occasionally managed, by rural inhabitants in the region. Periodic fruit harvests, if properly controlled have only a minimal impact on forest structure and function, yet can generate substantial economic returns Market-oriented extraction of the fruits produced by oligarchic forests appears to represent a promising alternative for reconciling the development and conservation of Amazonian forests.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Monodominant and Species-Rich Forests of the Humid Tropics: Causes for Their Co-OccurrenceThe American Naturalist, 1989
- The Subsidy from Nature: Shifting Cultivation, Successional Palm Forests, and Rural DevelopmentHuman Organization, 1988
- Tree species richness of upper Amazonian forestsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1988
- Estudios ecológicos de Camu-Camu (Myrciaria dubia). I. Producción de frutos en poblaciones naturales.Acta Amazonica, 1987
- Subsistence benefits from the babassu palm (Orbignya martiana)Economic Botany, 1985
- Um sistema agroflorestal na várzea do estuário amazônico (Ilha das Onças, Município de Barcarena, Estado do Pará)Acta Amazonica, 1985
- Nutritional evaluation of theJessenia bataua palm: Source of high quality protein and oil from tropical AmericaEconomic Botany, 1981
- Amazonian oil palms of promise: A surveyEconomic Botany, 1979
- The Mora Forests of Trinidad, British West IndiesJournal of Ecology, 1946
- The Vegetation of Moraballi Creek, British Guiana: An Ecological Study of a Limited Area of Tropical Rain Forest. Part IJournal of Ecology, 1933