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Ecological Restoration in Costa Rica Fred Loxsom Evolution and Diversity November 21, 2003
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Sustainable Development Course Summer 2002 & Summer 2003
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Renewable Energy
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Biodiversity
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Ecotourism
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Service Learning
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Sustainable Agriculture
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Sustainable Manufacturing
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Biodiversity
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Education and Culture
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Economic Indicators
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Costa Rica
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Guanacaste - Coast
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Guanacaste - Lowlands
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Guanacaste - Mountains
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Dry Tropical Forest 500 years ago, 200,000 square miles from Central Mexico to Panama. Profoundly threatened! Less than 2% remains. Less than 0.1% of the original has conservation status. More rare than tropical rain forest. Pressure from logging, farming, ranching.
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Characteristics Pacific coastal lowlands Tropical with prolonged dry season (5-8 months). 40 – 80 inches rain. In rain shadow of central mountain chain
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Deciduous Forest During the dry season 80% of the trees lose their leaves. 23,000 species. 65% of species in CR Fewer plant and bird species than in rainforest Variety of insects and mammals about the same
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Vegetation Low stature (30 m) Semi-deciduous Leguminosae family Upper story - deciduous Lower story – evergreens Understory – thorny trees
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Endangered Species Many rare and endangered species live in the dry tropical forest, including an endangered species of spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi) Many endemic species
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Deforestation Unlike rainforest land, tropical dry forest is good agricultural land and is useful for ranching and farming (sugar cane, corn, and beans.)
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Guanacaste Project Using the remaining islands of dry tropical forest as seed sources, restore a large section of dry tropical forest Involve local Ticos in the project so that they support it and profit from it.
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Guanacaste Conservation Area Starting in the mid 80s, Daniel Janzen, University of Penn., led an effort to establish a large park in Guanacaste. Dry Tropical Forest would be restored in this park. 120,000 terrestrial hectares (300,000 acres – ½ size of RI)
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Why is such a Large Protected Area is Needed?
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Reason #1 Dry season magnifies the differences between habitats and a large park provides a heterogeneous environment
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Reason #2 Tapirs, jaguars, and mountain lions – need large area to maintain healthy breeding populations
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Reason #3 Agricultural effects penetrate for 2 km into a natural area. Large area is needed to minimize these edge effects.
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Reason #4 Many animals migrate to moist areas during dry season. A large preserve is needed to protect migration routes
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Reason #5 Duplicate habitats are needed for ecotourism, scientific study, and conservation.
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Reason #6 GCA is watershed providing drinking water and irrigation for communities. (Rio Sapoa’ & Rio Tempisque)
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Restoration Plan Control of Fires Natural recolonization (low cost) Managed restoration Sustaining the forest
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Fire Used to clear land of trees Set by ranchers Provides habitat for exotic grasses
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Jaragua grass Hyparrhenia rufa Exotic grass Cattle graze on it. Suppression of fire allows trees to dominate over exotic grasses.
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Texas Grassland Restoration In Texas, fire is used to maintain native grasses against the encroachment of cedar and exotic grasses
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Natural Recolonization Natural, wind dispersal of seeds can move a forest several hundred meters in 10 years. 25% of the 215 tree species in Santa Rosa NP are wind-dispersed and would be pioneers.
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Natural Recolonization Animal dispersers drop seeds in dung Produces nuclear trees which produces habitat for seed dispersing animals. Some seeds must pass through animals to germinate.
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Managed Restoration GCA plants 4000 – 9000 trees each year. Usually native trees, but some experiments with non-natives as pioneers.
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Sustaining the Forest Low cost $3,000,000 endowment Local farmers as caretakers, guides, and fire fighters. All employees are Costa Ricans. With InBio, bioprospecting.
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Success? Restoring the distribution of plants and the diversity of animals to a degraded landscape will take 100 or more years. Success will depend upon the value of this project to the people of Costa Rica.
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Questions? Comments?
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Biology Since trees that disperse seeds by wind will be the pioneers – entering cleared land, doesn’t this mean that the composition of the restored forest will be different from the original forest?
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Biology Can exotic plants (e.g. jaragua grass) ever be eliminated from the dry tropical forest? If it can’t be eliminated, can the forest really be regenerated?
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Fire Why does fire play such a different role in maintaining prairies in the US and destroying forest in Central America? Is fire a part of the natural environment in both situations?
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Social issues Wouldn’t it be better to make the GCA a protected area and keep locals and tourists out of it? Isn’t that what we do in Yellowstone and other US National Parks?
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Social issues What is the proper role of foreigners in the conservation of Costa Rica’s natural resources? Is it appropriate that Daniel Janzen played such a large role?
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Ecotourism What is ecotourism? What role should ecotourism play in sustaining GCA?
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Bioprospecting GCA cooperates with InBio to do bioprospecting in the park. In turn, InBio will make deals with pharmaceutical firms to produce commercial products. Is this appropriate?
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