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Ecological Restoration in Costa Rica

Ecological Restoration in Costa Rica. Fred Loxsom Evolution and Diversity November 21, 2003. Sustainable Development Course Summer 2002 & Summer 2003. Renewable Energy. Biodiversity. Ecotourism. Service Learning. Sustainable Agriculture.

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Ecological Restoration in Costa Rica

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  1. Ecological Restoration in Costa Rica Fred Loxsom Evolution and Diversity November 21, 2003

  2. Sustainable Development CourseSummer 2002 & Summer 2003

  3. Renewable Energy

  4. Biodiversity

  5. Ecotourism

  6. Service Learning

  7. Sustainable Agriculture

  8. Sustainable Manufacturing

  9. Biodiversity

  10. Education and Culture

  11. Economic Indicators

  12. Costa Rica

  13. Guanacaste - Coast

  14. Guanacaste - Lowlands

  15. Guanacaste - Mountains

  16. 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.

  17. Characteristics • Pacific coastal lowlands • Tropical with prolonged dry season (5-8 months). • 40 – 80 inches rain. • In rain shadow of central mountain chain

  18. 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

  19. Vegetation • Low stature (30 m) • Semi-deciduous • Leguminosae family • Upper story - deciduous • Lower story – evergreens • Understory – thorny trees

  20. 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

  21. Deforestation • Unlike rainforest land, tropical dry forest is good agricultural land and is useful for ranching and farming (sugar cane, corn, and beans.)

  22. 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.

  23. 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)

  24. Why is such a Large Protected Area is Needed?

  25. Reason #1 Dry season magnifies the differences between habitats and a large park provides a heterogeneous environment

  26. Reason #2 Tapirs, jaguars, and mountain lions – need large area to maintain healthy breeding populations

  27. Reason #3 Agricultural effects penetrate for 2 km into a natural area. Large area is needed to minimize these edge effects.

  28. Reason #4 Many animals migrate to moist areas during dry season. A large preserve is needed to protect migration routes

  29. Reason #5 Duplicate habitats are needed for ecotourism, scientific study, and conservation.

  30. Reason #6 GCA is watershed providing drinking water and irrigation for communities. (Rio Sapoa’ & Rio Tempisque)

  31. Restoration Plan • Control of Fires • Natural recolonization (low cost) • Managed restoration • Sustaining the forest

  32. Fire • Used to clear land of trees • Set by ranchers • Provides habitat for exotic grasses

  33. Jaragua grass • Hyparrhenia rufa • Exotic grass • Cattle graze on it. • Suppression of fire allows trees to dominate over exotic grasses.

  34. Texas Grassland Restoration • In Texas, fire is used to maintain native grasses against the encroachment of cedar and exotic grasses

  35. 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.

  36. 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.

  37. Managed Restoration • GCA plants 4000 – 9000 trees each year. • Usually native trees, but some experiments with non-natives as pioneers.

  38. 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.

  39. 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.

  40. Questions? Comments?

  41. 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?

  42. 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?

  43. 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?

  44. 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?

  45. 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?

  46. Ecotourism • What is ecotourism? • What role should ecotourism play in sustaining GCA?

  47. 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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