Calgary Herald

Report says fragmentin­g of forests promotes extinction­s

- BOB WEBER

Cutting up forests into ever-smaller bits starts a die-off of species that lasts decades — an “extinction debt” incurred today and paid by future generation­s, says a study on forest fragmentat­ion.

“It’s our grandchild­ren and maybe more,” said McGill University’s Andrew Gonzalez, one of the coauthors of a paper published Friday in the journal Science. “It’s several generation­s of human beings down the line.”

Biologist Gonzalez and his colleagues have published what they say is the first study that measures the extent to which developmen­t has invaded the world’s forests and estimates its long-term impacts.

They found more than 70 per cent of global forests are within a kilometre of a road, field, town or other human disturbanc­e — close enough to degrade forest habitat.

Specific informatio­n on Canada’s rate of disturbanc­e wasn’t available. But previous studies found the eastern slopes of the Alberta Rockies have lost 6.8 per cent of unprotecte­d forests since 2000 and the oilsands region lost 5.5 per cent — higher deforestat­ion rates than in the Brazilian rain forest.

The global numbers are significan­t, said Gonzalez.

“These are frightenin­g numbers. We had no idea.”

The study compared results from seven long-term experiment­s on the impacts of fragmentat­ion from Borneo to Canada.

“No matter what kind of forest you do that in, these experiment­s consistent­ly show loss of biodiversi­ty and wholesale changes to the functionin­g of these ecosystems.”

Even when disturbanc­e stopped, species loss didn’t. Plants and animals kept disappeari­ng as a freshly fragmented forest slowly stabilized — a phenomenon first suggested by mathematic­al models in the ‘90s and referred to as “extinction debt.”

“You incur a cost on the landscape and the final debt in terms of extinction is paid over time,” Gonzalez said. “It does compound. We get these long-term, long-lasting losses in biodiversi­ty.”

Some studies have shown it takes more than a century before a disturbed forest achieves stability.

Gonzalez noted fragmentat­ion effects are taking place at the same time forests are stressed by climate change. And Canada’s boreal forest is experienci­ng some of the fastest climate change in the world.

“When you get climate change and forest fragmentat­ion at the same time, that’s quite a lethal cocktail.”

Gonzalez and his colleagues want government­s to do more to ensure that patches of forest remain connected through, for example, undisturbe­d corridors between them.

 ?? THE
CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES ?? Fragmentin­g forests may reduce biodiversi­ty for decades.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES Fragmentin­g forests may reduce biodiversi­ty for decades.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada