Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia

Seedlings of Azadirachta excelsa, Hopea odorata and Vitex pinnata were line- and gap- planted on a logged-over site in Pasoh Forest Reserve, Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia. After two and a half years of planting, H. odorata exhibited the h ighest average survival percentage of 97% in the large discon...

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Main Author: Bigcas, Evelyn Varquez
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10135/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10135/1/FH_2003_7.pdf
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author Bigcas, Evelyn Varquez
author_facet Bigcas, Evelyn Varquez
author_sort Bigcas, Evelyn Varquez
building UPM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Seedlings of Azadirachta excelsa, Hopea odorata and Vitex pinnata were line- and gap- planted on a logged-over site in Pasoh Forest Reserve, Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia. After two and a half years of planting, H. odorata exhibited the h ighest average survival percentage of 97% in the large discontinuous gaps of 20m x 20m (G3 method), followed by V. pinnata 91%, and A. exce/sa 82%. In G4 (10m x 10m X 9/ha gaps), the survival percentage of H. odorata was 95%, followed by V. pinnata (89%) and A . excelsa ( 84%). In G2 (10m x 10m x 5/ha gaps), H. odorata showed 90% survival, followed by V. pinnata (71%) and A. excelsa (64%). In the line planting, H. odorata attained 93% survival, V. pinnata 84% and A. excelsa 75%. Relatively high survival percentages of the seedlings were due to the capacity of the seedlings to survive under situation typical of degraded lands. Moreover, relatively high light environment and high organic matter content may have also contributed to the low mortality. Mortality can be attributed to the activities of the wild boars that collected small twigs and seedlings as nest during breeding periods. The broken stems (reduced heights) that sometimes led to seedling death were mainly due to strong winds which are typical of Malaysia, the monkeys who play with and eat the top shoots, and the weeds who strangled and pulled the seedlings downwards. The relatively high survival rates are indicative of the species capacity to colonise and regenerate degraded lands.
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language English
English
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spelling upm-101352024-03-15T06:54:08Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10135/ Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia Bigcas, Evelyn Varquez Seedlings of Azadirachta excelsa, Hopea odorata and Vitex pinnata were line- and gap- planted on a logged-over site in Pasoh Forest Reserve, Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia. After two and a half years of planting, H. odorata exhibited the h ighest average survival percentage of 97% in the large discontinuous gaps of 20m x 20m (G3 method), followed by V. pinnata 91%, and A. exce/sa 82%. In G4 (10m x 10m X 9/ha gaps), the survival percentage of H. odorata was 95%, followed by V. pinnata (89%) and A . excelsa ( 84%). In G2 (10m x 10m x 5/ha gaps), H. odorata showed 90% survival, followed by V. pinnata (71%) and A. excelsa (64%). In the line planting, H. odorata attained 93% survival, V. pinnata 84% and A. excelsa 75%. Relatively high survival percentages of the seedlings were due to the capacity of the seedlings to survive under situation typical of degraded lands. Moreover, relatively high light environment and high organic matter content may have also contributed to the low mortality. Mortality can be attributed to the activities of the wild boars that collected small twigs and seedlings as nest during breeding periods. The broken stems (reduced heights) that sometimes led to seedling death were mainly due to strong winds which are typical of Malaysia, the monkeys who play with and eat the top shoots, and the weeds who strangled and pulled the seedlings downwards. The relatively high survival rates are indicative of the species capacity to colonise and regenerate degraded lands. 2003 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10135/1/FH_2003_7.pdf Bigcas, Evelyn Varquez (2003) Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia. PhD thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia. Forest restoration - Negeri Sembilan - Forest Reserve Pasoh - Case studies English
spellingShingle Forest restoration - Negeri Sembilan - Forest Reserve Pasoh - Case studies
Bigcas, Evelyn Varquez
Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia
title Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia
title_full Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia
title_fullStr Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia
title_short Rehabilitation of a Degraded Tropical Lowland Forest Using Three Indigenous Timber Species in Peninsular Malaysia
title_sort rehabilitation of a degraded tropical lowland forest using three indigenous timber species in peninsular malaysia
topic Forest restoration - Negeri Sembilan - Forest Reserve Pasoh - Case studies
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10135/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10135/1/FH_2003_7.pdf