Fritz Kleinschroth
Bangor University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Fritz Kleinschroth.
Ecosphere | 2015
Fritz Kleinschroth; Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury; Plinio Sist; Frédéric Mortier; J.R. Healey
Logging roads in the Congo Basin are often associated with forest degradation through fragmentation and access for other land uses. However, in concessions managed for timber production, secondary roads are usually closed after exploitation and are expected to disappear subsequently. Little is known about the effectiveness of this prescription and the factors affecting vegetation recovery rate on abandoned logging roads. In a novel approach we assessed logging roads as temporary elements in the forest landscape that vary in persistence depending on environmental conditions. We analyzed road persistence during the period 1986�2013 in adjacent parts of Cameroon, Central African Republic and Republic of Congo. Three successive phases of road recovery were identified on LANDSAT images: open roads with bare soil, roads in the process of revegetation after abandonment and disappeared roads no longer distinguishable from the surrounding forest. Field based inventories confirmed significant differences between all three categories in density and richness of woody species and cover of dominant herbs. We used dead-end road segments, built for timber exploitation, as sampling units. Only 6% of them were identified as being re-opened. Survival analyses showed median persistence of four years for open roads before changing to the revegetating state and 20 years for revegetating roads before disappearance. Persistence of revegetating roads was 25% longer on geologically poor substrates which might result from slower forest recovery in areas with lower levels of soil nutrient content. We highlight the contrast amongst forests growing on different types of substrate in their potential for ecosystem recovery over time after roads have been abandoned. Forest management plans need to take these constraints into account. Logging activities should be concentrated on the existing road network and sites of low soil resource levels should be spared from business-as-usual exploitation.
Conservation Biology | 2017
Fritz Kleinschroth; J.R. Healey; Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury; Frédéric Mortier; Radu S. Stoica
Forest degradation in the tropics is often associated with roads built for selective logging. The protection of intact forest landscapes (IFL) that are not accessible by roads is high on the biodiversity conservation agenda and a challenge for logging concessions certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). A frequently advocated conservation objective is to maximize the retention of roadless space, a concept that is based on distance to the nearest road from any point. We developed a novel use of the empty-space function - a general statistical tool based on stochastic geometry and random sets theory - to calculate roadless space in a part of the Congo Basin where road networks have been expanding rapidly. We compared the temporal development of roadless space in certified and uncertified logging concessions inside and outside areas declared IFL in 2000. Inside IFLs, road-network expansion led to a decrease in roadless space by more than half from 1999 to 2007. After 2007, loss leveled out in most areas to close to 0 due to an equilibrium between newly built roads and abandoned roads that became revegetated. However, concessions in IFL certified by FSC since around 2007 continuously lost roadless space and reached a level comparable to all other concessions. Only national parks remained mostly roadless. We recommend that forest-management policies make the preservation of large connected forest areas a top priority by effectively monitoring - and limiting - the occupation of space by roads that are permanently accessible.
Nature Ecology and Evolution | 2018
Jaboury Ghazoul; Fritz Kleinschroth
Recently publicized killings of environmental defenders are the latest iteration of a long and tragic history of violent conflict over access to land and resources. To bring about effective change, we must first understand the drivers and conditions that lead to violence in the sphere of environmental and land conflict.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2018
Fritz Kleinschroth; Claude A. Garcia; Jaboury Ghazoul
In 2014, the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) added a new criterion to its principles that requires protection of intact forest landscapes (IFLs). An IFL is an extensive area of forest that lacks roads and other signs of human activity as detected through remote sensing. In the Congo basin, our analysis of road networks in formally approved concessionary logging areas revealed greater loss of IFL in certified than in noncertified concessions. In areas of informal (i.e., nonregulated) extraction, road networks are known to be less detectable by remote sensing. Under the current definition of IFL, companies certified under FSC standards are likely to be penalized relative to the noncertified as well as the informal logging sector on account of their planned road networks, despite an otherwise better standard of forest management. This could ultimately undermine certification and its wider adoption, with implications for the future of sustainable forest management.
Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science | 2010
Arne Cierjacks; Birgit Kleinschmit; Maren Babinsky; Fritz Kleinschroth; Arvid Markert; Markus Menzel; Ulrike Ziechmann; Theresa Schiller; Markus Graf; Friederike Lang
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2016
Fritz Kleinschroth; J.R. Healey; Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury
Journal of Applied Ecology | 2016
Fritz Kleinschroth; J.R. Healey; Plinio Sist; Frédéric Mortier; Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury
Environmental Science & Policy | 2016
Bethan Christine O'Leary; Kristian Kvist; Helen R. Bayliss; Géraldine Derroire; J.R. Healey; Kathryn M. Hughes; Fritz Kleinschroth; Marija Sciberras; Paul Woodcock; Andrew S. Pullin
Biotropica | 2017
Fritz Kleinschroth; J.R. Healey
Forest Ecology and Management | 2013
Fritz Kleinschroth; Caspar Schöning; James B. Kung’u; Ingo Kowarik; Arne Cierjacks
Collaboration
Dive into the Fritz Kleinschroth's collaboration.
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputsCentre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputsCentre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputs