Contents
Ecological
Consequences of Forest Use: From Genes to Ecosystem A Case Study
in the Biligiri Rangaswamy Temple Wildlife Sanctuary, South India
R. Uma Shaanker, K.N. Ganeshaiah, M. Nageswara Rao
and N.A. Aravind
Human
dependence on forests can have manifold ecological consequences
from the level of genes to the entire ecosystem. Despite the extensive
use of forest products by communities, especially in tropical countries
such as India, there have been hardly any attempts at monitoring
these consequences. Understanding the consequences could facilitate
the development of management protocols that, while maintaining
the livelihoods of the forest-dependent communities, could help
minimise the associated ecological cost. In a unique attempt over
the last decade, we have examined the ecological consequences of
forest use, from genes to ecosystem, in the Biligiri Rangaswamy
Temple Wildlife Sanctuary, south India. In this article we review
these findings and demonstrate that monitoring of biodiversity elements
from genes to ecosystem is important in understanding the underlying
process of change and in formulating appropriate strategies for
the conservation of biodiversity.
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