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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/139418

Title: Tropical montane cloud forests: current threats and opportunities for their conservation and sustainable management in Mexico
Authors: Toledo-Aceves, T
Meave del Castillo, Jorge Arturo
González-Espinosa, M
Ramírez-Marcial, N
Issue Date: 2011
Citation: Toledo-Aceves, T; Meave, JA; González-Espinosa, M; Ramírez-Marcial, N (2011). Tropical montane cloud forests: current threats and opportunities for their conservation and sustainable management in Mexico. Journal of Environmental Management, 92(3):974-98.
Abstract: Tropical montane cloud forests (TMCF) are among the most threatened ecosystems globally in spite of their high strategic value for sustainable development due to the key role played by these forests in hydrological cycle maintenance and as reservoirs of endemic biodiversity. Resources for effective conservation and management programs are rarely sufficient, and criteria must be applied to prioritise TMCF for conservation action. This paper reports a priority analysis of the 13 main regions of TMCF distribution in Mexico, based on four criteria: (1) forest quality, (2) threats to forest permanence, (3) threats to forest integrity, and (4) opportunities for conservation. Due to the diverse socio-environmental conditions of the local communities living in Mexican TMCF regions, their associated social characteristics were also evaluated to provide a background for the planning of conservation actions. A set of indicators was defined for the measurement of each criterion. To assign priority values for subregions within each main region, an international team of 40 participants evaluated all the indicators using multicriteria decision-making analysis. This procedure enabled the identification of 15 subregions of critical priority, 17 of high priority, and 10 of medium priority; three more were not analysed due to lack of information. The evaluation revealed a number of subjects that had hitherto been undetected and that may prove useful for prioritisation efforts in other regions where TMCF is similarly documented and faces equally severe threats. Based on this analysis, key recommendations are outlined to advance conservation objectives in those TMCF areas that are subjected to high pressure on forest resources.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/139418
ISSN: 3014797
Appears in Collections:Departamento de Ecología y Recursos Naturales

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