The role of land‐use history in driving successional pathways and its implications for the restoration of tropical forests

ABSTRACT Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human‐modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across and within landscapes, with divergent regrowth rates, vegetation structure and species composition. While climatic and edaphic cond...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBiological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society Vol. 96; no. 4; pp. 1114 - 1134
Main Authors Jakovac, Catarina C., Junqueira, André B., Crouzeilles, Renato, Peña‐Claros, Marielos, Mesquita, Rita C. G., Bongers, Frans
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.08.2021
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1464-7931
1469-185X
1469-185X
DOI10.1111/brv.12694

Cover

Loading…
Abstract ABSTRACT Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human‐modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across and within landscapes, with divergent regrowth rates, vegetation structure and species composition. While climatic and edaphic conditions drive variations across regions, land‐use history plays a central role in driving alternative successional pathways within human‐modified landscapes. How land use affects succession depends on its intensity, spatial extent, frequency, duration and management practices, and is mediated by a complex combination of mechanisms acting on different ecosystem components and at different spatial and temporal scales. We review the literature aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms underlying the long‐lasting effects of land use on tropical forest succession and to discuss its implications for forest restoration. We organize it following a framework based on the hierarchical model of succession and ecological filtering theory. This review shows that our knowledge is mostly derived from studies in Neotropical forests regenerating after abandonment of shifting cultivation or pasture systems. Vegetation is the ecological component assessed most often. Little is known regarding how the recovery of belowground processes and microbiota communities is affected by previous land‐use history. In published studies, land‐use history has been mostly characterized by type, without discrimination of intensity, extent, duration or frequency. We compile and discuss the metrics used to describe land‐use history, aiming to facilitate future studies. The literature shows that (i) species availability to succession is affected by transformations in the landscape that affect dispersal, and by management practices and seed predation, which affect the composition and diversity of propagules on site. Once a species successfully reaches an abandoned field, its establishment and performance are dependent on resistance to management practices, tolerance to (modified) soil conditions, herbivory, competition with weeds and invasive species, and facilitation by remnant trees. (ii) Structural and compositional divergences at early stages of succession remain for decades, suggesting that early communities play an important role in governing further ecosystem functioning and processes during succession. Management interventions at early stages could help enhance recovery rates and manipulate successional pathways. (iii) The combination of local and landscape conditions defines the limitations to succession and therefore the potential for natural regeneration to restore ecosystem properties effectively. The knowledge summarized here could enable the identification of conditions in which natural regeneration could efficiently promote forest restoration, and where specific management practices are required to foster succession. Finally, characterization of the landscape context and previous land‐use history is essential to understand the limitations to succession and therefore to define cost‐effective restoration strategies. Advancing knowledge on these two aspects is key for finding generalizable relations that will increase the predictability of succession and the efficiency of forest restoration under different landscape contexts.
AbstractList Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human‐modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across and within landscapes, with divergent regrowth rates, vegetation structure and species composition. While climatic and edaphic conditions drive variations across regions, land‐use history plays a central role in driving alternative successional pathways within human‐modified landscapes. How land use affects succession depends on its intensity, spatial extent, frequency, duration and management practices, and is mediated by a complex combination of mechanisms acting on different ecosystem components and at different spatial and temporal scales. We review the literature aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms underlying the long‐lasting effects of land use on tropical forest succession and to discuss its implications for forest restoration. We organize it following a framework based on the hierarchical model of succession and ecological filtering theory. This review shows that our knowledge is mostly derived from studies in Neotropical forests regenerating after abandonment of shifting cultivation or pasture systems. Vegetation is the ecological component assessed most often. Little is known regarding how the recovery of belowground processes and microbiota communities is affected by previous land‐use history. In published studies, land‐use history has been mostly characterized by type, without discrimination of intensity, extent, duration or frequency. We compile and discuss the metrics used to describe land‐use history, aiming to facilitate future studies. The literature shows that (i) species availability to succession is affected by transformations in the landscape that affect dispersal, and by management practices and seed predation, which affect the composition and diversity of propagules on site. Once a species successfully reaches an abandoned field, its establishment and performance are dependent on resistance to management practices, tolerance to (modified) soil conditions, herbivory, competition with weeds and invasive species, and facilitation by remnant trees. (ii) Structural and compositional divergences at early stages of succession remain for decades, suggesting that early communities play an important role in governing further ecosystem functioning and processes during succession. Management interventions at early stages could help enhance recovery rates and manipulate successional pathways. (iii) The combination of local and landscape conditions defines the limitations to succession and therefore the potential for natural regeneration to restore ecosystem properties effectively. The knowledge summarized here could enable the identification of conditions in which natural regeneration could efficiently promote forest restoration, and where specific management practices are required to foster succession. Finally, characterization of the landscape context and previous land‐use history is essential to understand the limitations to succession and therefore to define cost‐effective restoration strategies. Advancing knowledge on these two aspects is key for finding generalizable relations that will increase the predictability of succession and the efficiency of forest restoration under different landscape contexts.
Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human-modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across and within landscapes, with divergent regrowth rates, vegetation structure and species composition. While climatic and edaphic conditions drive variations across regions, land-use history plays a central role in driving alternative successional pathways within human-modified landscapes. How land use affects succession depends on its intensity, spatial extent, frequency, duration and management practices, and is mediated by a complex combination of mechanisms acting on different ecosystem components and at different spatial and temporal scales. We review the literature aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms underlying the long-lasting effects of land use on tropical forest succession and to discuss its implications for forest restoration. We organize it following a framework based on the hierarchical model of succession and ecological filtering theory. This review shows that our knowledge is mostly derived from studies in Neotropical forests regenerating after abandonment of shifting cultivation or pasture systems. Vegetation is the ecological component assessed most often. Little is known regarding how the recovery of belowground processes and microbiota communities is affected by previous land-use history. In published studies, land-use history has been mostly characterized by type, without discrimination of intensity, extent, duration or frequency. We compile and discuss the metrics used to describe land-use history, aiming to facilitate future studies. The literature shows that (i) species availability to succession is affected by transformations in the landscape that affect dispersal, and by management practices and seed predation, which affect the composition and diversity of propagules on site. Once a species successfully reaches an abandoned field, its establishment and performance are dependent on resistance to management practices, tolerance to (modified) soil conditions, herbivory, competition with weeds and invasive species, and facilitation by remnant trees. (ii) Structural and compositional divergences at early stages of succession remain for decades, suggesting that early communities play an important role in governing further ecosystem functioning and processes during succession. Management interventions at early stages could help enhance recovery rates and manipulate successional pathways. (iii) The combination of local and landscape conditions defines the limitations to succession and therefore the potential for natural regeneration to restore ecosystem properties effectively. The knowledge summarized here could enable the identification of conditions in which natural regeneration could efficiently promote forest restoration, and where specific management practices are required to foster succession. Finally, characterization of the landscape context and previous land-use history is essential to understand the limitations to succession and therefore to define cost-effective restoration strategies. Advancing knowledge on these two aspects is key for finding generalizable relations that will increase the predictability of succession and the efficiency of forest restoration under different landscape contexts.Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human-modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across and within landscapes, with divergent regrowth rates, vegetation structure and species composition. While climatic and edaphic conditions drive variations across regions, land-use history plays a central role in driving alternative successional pathways within human-modified landscapes. How land use affects succession depends on its intensity, spatial extent, frequency, duration and management practices, and is mediated by a complex combination of mechanisms acting on different ecosystem components and at different spatial and temporal scales. We review the literature aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms underlying the long-lasting effects of land use on tropical forest succession and to discuss its implications for forest restoration. We organize it following a framework based on the hierarchical model of succession and ecological filtering theory. This review shows that our knowledge is mostly derived from studies in Neotropical forests regenerating after abandonment of shifting cultivation or pasture systems. Vegetation is the ecological component assessed most often. Little is known regarding how the recovery of belowground processes and microbiota communities is affected by previous land-use history. In published studies, land-use history has been mostly characterized by type, without discrimination of intensity, extent, duration or frequency. We compile and discuss the metrics used to describe land-use history, aiming to facilitate future studies. The literature shows that (i) species availability to succession is affected by transformations in the landscape that affect dispersal, and by management practices and seed predation, which affect the composition and diversity of propagules on site. Once a species successfully reaches an abandoned field, its establishment and performance are dependent on resistance to management practices, tolerance to (modified) soil conditions, herbivory, competition with weeds and invasive species, and facilitation by remnant trees. (ii) Structural and compositional divergences at early stages of succession remain for decades, suggesting that early communities play an important role in governing further ecosystem functioning and processes during succession. Management interventions at early stages could help enhance recovery rates and manipulate successional pathways. (iii) The combination of local and landscape conditions defines the limitations to succession and therefore the potential for natural regeneration to restore ecosystem properties effectively. The knowledge summarized here could enable the identification of conditions in which natural regeneration could efficiently promote forest restoration, and where specific management practices are required to foster succession. Finally, characterization of the landscape context and previous land-use history is essential to understand the limitations to succession and therefore to define cost-effective restoration strategies. Advancing knowledge on these two aspects is key for finding generalizable relations that will increase the predictability of succession and the efficiency of forest restoration under different landscape contexts.
Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human‐modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across and within landscapes, with divergent regrowth rates, vegetation structure and species composition. While climatic and edaphic conditions drive variations across regions, land‐use history plays a central role in driving alternative successional pathways within human‐modified landscapes. How land use affects succession depends on its intensity, spatial extent, frequency, duration and management practices, and is mediated by a complex combination of mechanisms acting on different ecosystem components and at different spatial and temporal scales. We review the literature aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms underlying the long‐lasting effects of land use on tropical forest succession and to discuss its implications for forest restoration. We organize it following a framework based on the hierarchical model of succession and ecological filtering theory. This review shows that our knowledge is mostly derived from studies in Neotropical forests regenerating after abandonment of shifting cultivation or pasture systems. Vegetation is the ecological component assessed most often. Little is known regarding how the recovery of belowground processes and microbiota communities is affected by previous land‐use history. In published studies, land‐use history has been mostly characterized by type, without discrimination of intensity, extent, duration or frequency. We compile and discuss the metrics used to describe land‐use history, aiming to facilitate future studies. The literature shows that ( i ) species availability to succession is affected by transformations in the landscape that affect dispersal, and by management practices and seed predation, which affect the composition and diversity of propagules on site. Once a species successfully reaches an abandoned field, its establishment and performance are dependent on resistance to management practices, tolerance to (modified) soil conditions, herbivory, competition with weeds and invasive species, and facilitation by remnant trees. ( ii ) Structural and compositional divergences at early stages of succession remain for decades, suggesting that early communities play an important role in governing further ecosystem functioning and processes during succession. Management interventions at early stages could help enhance recovery rates and manipulate successional pathways. ( iii ) The combination of local and landscape conditions defines the limitations to succession and therefore the potential for natural regeneration to restore ecosystem properties effectively. The knowledge summarized here could enable the identification of conditions in which natural regeneration could efficiently promote forest restoration, and where specific management practices are required to foster succession. Finally, characterization of the landscape context and previous land‐use history is essential to understand the limitations to succession and therefore to define cost‐effective restoration strategies. Advancing knowledge on these two aspects is key for finding generalizable relations that will increase the predictability of succession and the efficiency of forest restoration under different landscape contexts.
ABSTRACT Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human‐modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across and within landscapes, with divergent regrowth rates, vegetation structure and species composition. While climatic and edaphic conditions drive variations across regions, land‐use history plays a central role in driving alternative successional pathways within human‐modified landscapes. How land use affects succession depends on its intensity, spatial extent, frequency, duration and management practices, and is mediated by a complex combination of mechanisms acting on different ecosystem components and at different spatial and temporal scales. We review the literature aiming to provide a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms underlying the long‐lasting effects of land use on tropical forest succession and to discuss its implications for forest restoration. We organize it following a framework based on the hierarchical model of succession and ecological filtering theory. This review shows that our knowledge is mostly derived from studies in Neotropical forests regenerating after abandonment of shifting cultivation or pasture systems. Vegetation is the ecological component assessed most often. Little is known regarding how the recovery of belowground processes and microbiota communities is affected by previous land‐use history. In published studies, land‐use history has been mostly characterized by type, without discrimination of intensity, extent, duration or frequency. We compile and discuss the metrics used to describe land‐use history, aiming to facilitate future studies. The literature shows that (i) species availability to succession is affected by transformations in the landscape that affect dispersal, and by management practices and seed predation, which affect the composition and diversity of propagules on site. Once a species successfully reaches an abandoned field, its establishment and performance are dependent on resistance to management practices, tolerance to (modified) soil conditions, herbivory, competition with weeds and invasive species, and facilitation by remnant trees. (ii) Structural and compositional divergences at early stages of succession remain for decades, suggesting that early communities play an important role in governing further ecosystem functioning and processes during succession. Management interventions at early stages could help enhance recovery rates and manipulate successional pathways. (iii) The combination of local and landscape conditions defines the limitations to succession and therefore the potential for natural regeneration to restore ecosystem properties effectively. The knowledge summarized here could enable the identification of conditions in which natural regeneration could efficiently promote forest restoration, and where specific management practices are required to foster succession. Finally, characterization of the landscape context and previous land‐use history is essential to understand the limitations to succession and therefore to define cost‐effective restoration strategies. Advancing knowledge on these two aspects is key for finding generalizable relations that will increase the predictability of succession and the efficiency of forest restoration under different landscape contexts.
Author Mesquita, Rita C. G.
Crouzeilles, Renato
Jakovac, Catarina C.
Peña‐Claros, Marielos
Bongers, Frans
Junqueira, André B.
AuthorAffiliation 2 Forest Ecology and Management Group Wageningen University & Research Wageningen 6700 AA The Netherlands
1 International Institute for Sustainability Estrada Dona Castorina, 124 Rio de Janeiro 22460‐320 Brazil
5 Mestrado Profissional em Ciências do Meio Ambiente Universidade Veiga de Almeida Rio de Janeiro 20271‐901 Brazil
4 International Institute for Sustainability Australia Canberra ACT 2602 Australia
6 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia Av. André Araújo, 2936 Manaus 69083‐000 Brazil
3 Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Carrer de les Columnes s/n Cerdanyola del Vallès Barcelona 08193 Spain
AuthorAffiliation_xml – name: 1 International Institute for Sustainability Estrada Dona Castorina, 124 Rio de Janeiro 22460‐320 Brazil
– name: 2 Forest Ecology and Management Group Wageningen University & Research Wageningen 6700 AA The Netherlands
– name: 5 Mestrado Profissional em Ciências do Meio Ambiente Universidade Veiga de Almeida Rio de Janeiro 20271‐901 Brazil
– name: 4 International Institute for Sustainability Australia Canberra ACT 2602 Australia
– name: 6 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia Av. André Araújo, 2936 Manaus 69083‐000 Brazil
– name: 3 Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Carrer de les Columnes s/n Cerdanyola del Vallès Barcelona 08193 Spain
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Catarina C.
  orcidid: 0000-0002-8130-852X
  surname: Jakovac
  fullname: Jakovac, Catarina C.
  email: catacj@gmail.com
  organization: Wageningen University & Research
– sequence: 2
  givenname: André B.
  surname: Junqueira
  fullname: Junqueira, André B.
  organization: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Renato
  surname: Crouzeilles
  fullname: Crouzeilles, Renato
  organization: Universidade Veiga de Almeida
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Marielos
  surname: Peña‐Claros
  fullname: Peña‐Claros, Marielos
  organization: Wageningen University & Research
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Rita C. G.
  surname: Mesquita
  fullname: Mesquita, Rita C. G.
  organization: Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia
– sequence: 6
  givenname: Frans
  surname: Bongers
  fullname: Bongers, Frans
  organization: Wageningen University & Research
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33709566$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
BookMark eNp9kc1q3DAUhUVIyV-7yAsUQTbtwsmVbdnSJtCG_kGgENLSndDI1xkFjeVK9oSBLvIIecY-SeWZNDSBVBuJe757OLp3n2x3vkNCDhkcs3ROZmF5zPJKlltkj5WVzJjgP7bX7zKrZcF2yX6M1wCpUBU7ZLcoapC8qvbIr8s50uAdUt9Sp7vm9-3dGJHObRx8WFHb0SbYpe2uaByNwRit77SjvR7mN3oVaWqhdojULnpnjR6SHGnrAx0mY5xc1sXJfwi-T4yb9KTEl-RFq13EV_f3Afn28cPl2efs_OunL2fvzjPDQZbZTAMXjc6lwZbXWPEaEIHlULYzkJWGnCPXLUfZcFEKAAGlQalrwRnnghUH5HTj24-zBTYGuyFop_pgFzqslNdWPVY6O1dXfqlEUQGDyeDNvUHwP8cUXS1sNOjSwNCPUeU8xeGCC0jo0RP02o8hjWyi6pwXUoJI1Ot_Ez1E-buYBLzdACb4GAO2DwgDNS1dpaWr9dITe_KENXZYDz19xrr_ddxYh6vnrdX7i--bjj-ALMDm
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_3390_f14050865
crossref_primary_10_1002_pan3_10435
crossref_primary_10_3390_agronomy11122484
crossref_primary_10_1111_btp_13347
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10113_021_01836_5
crossref_primary_10_3956_2022_98_1_28
crossref_primary_10_1080_27658511_2025_2478704
crossref_primary_10_1111_brv_13051
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10980_023_01694_y
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_envres_2025_120956
crossref_primary_10_1007_s11104_024_06844_y
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ecoleng_2023_107109
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2021_735457
crossref_primary_10_1371_journal_pclm_0000018
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_13645
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_70157
crossref_primary_10_1111_brv_12924
crossref_primary_10_1098_rspb_2022_2203
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jaridenv_2023_104948
crossref_primary_10_1111_1365_2664_14128
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_landurbplan_2022_104400
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_4794
crossref_primary_10_1111_gcb_70037
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10342_024_01671_3
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10668_024_05422_7
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_scitotenv_2022_153403
crossref_primary_10_1111_1365_2745_13738
crossref_primary_10_1111_jvs_13281
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_rhisph_2022_100474
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_forpol_2022_102879
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2024_121709
crossref_primary_10_1088_1748_9326_ac1701
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_4780
crossref_primary_10_1590_1809_4392202400022
crossref_primary_10_1111_jvs_13205
crossref_primary_10_1073_pnas_2202310119
crossref_primary_10_1002_ecs2_4744
crossref_primary_10_3390_plants13172474
crossref_primary_10_1002_ppp3_10515
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ecolind_2023_110225
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_14381
crossref_primary_10_3390_f13030466
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2024_122110
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jenvman_2023_119951
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ecoleng_2023_107051
crossref_primary_10_1111_geb_13856
crossref_primary_10_3389_ffgc_2023_1098666
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_scitotenv_2023_168973
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_biocon_2022_109489
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jnc_2022_126152
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10021_023_00861_1
crossref_primary_10_1590_1677_941x_abb_2022_0158
crossref_primary_10_1038_s43247_024_01949_9
crossref_primary_10_4236_ars_2023_121002
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_gecco_2024_e02952
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_13942
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10531_024_02915_9
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_gecco_2023_e02510
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10531_022_02481_y
crossref_primary_10_1155_2023_8521303
crossref_primary_10_15446_caldasia_v44n2_82255
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_14272
crossref_primary_10_1098_rstb_2021_0070
crossref_primary_10_3390_f13030434
crossref_primary_10_3390_land13101644
crossref_primary_10_1007_s44246_024_00165_6
crossref_primary_10_1038_s44358_025_00032_1
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ecolind_2022_109670
crossref_primary_10_3759_tropics_MS22_07
crossref_primary_10_1111_avsc_12784
crossref_primary_10_1088_1748_9326_ac45b3
crossref_primary_10_3390_f15101700
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_isprsjprs_2023_12_013
crossref_primary_10_3390_rs16122085
crossref_primary_10_1111_btp_13275
crossref_primary_10_1111_btp_70025
crossref_primary_10_3390_su142416679
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_120937
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_heliyon_2022_e12504
crossref_primary_10_1098_rstb_2021_0086
crossref_primary_10_1146_annurev_ecolsys_102722_025653
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_14004
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_landusepol_2022_106076
crossref_primary_10_1111_rec_13399
crossref_primary_10_1073_pnas_2003405118
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_agee_2023_108603
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_catena_2024_107825
crossref_primary_10_1002_ldr_5282
crossref_primary_10_1111_1365_2664_14754
crossref_primary_10_1007_s13592_024_01095_3
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_foreco_2023_120893
crossref_primary_10_1111_brv_12995
Cites_doi 10.1017/S0266467402002171
10.1111/conl.12607
10.1016/S0378-1127(00)00466-7
10.1111/j.1744-7429.1999.tb00136.x
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00154.x
10.1007/s12231-010-9138-8
10.1371/journal.pone.0083284
10.1016/j.foreco.2018.11.021
10.1016/0167-8809(95)00590-O
10.1111/btp.12384
10.1016/j.biocon.2011.11.009
10.1016/j.foreco.2010.12.026
10.1590/1809-4392200331052
10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01333.x
10.1016/S0378-1127(97)00070-4
10.1111/j.1365-2745.2010.01641.x
10.1080/17550874.2012.735714
10.1111/oik.03229
10.1111/0033-0124.00233
10.1016/j.foreco.2016.09.020
10.1111/1365-2745.12608
10.1016/0304-3746(82)90012-9
10.1111/nph.13734
10.1111/brv.12231
10.1007/s11258-007-9327-4
10.1016/j.foreco.2004.07.001
10.1111/1365-2745.12843
10.1088/1748-9326/ab79e6
10.1016/j.apsoil.2015.12.005
10.1007/s10531-009-9714-3
10.1007/s12229-010-9059-3
10.1007/s00442-012-2482-x
10.1016/j.foreco.2011.12.015
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2005.00041.x
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2001.tb00177.x
10.1016/j.foreco.2011.08.013
10.1111/jvs.12376
10.1111/conl.12709
10.1111/btp.12382
10.1038/s41559-018-0559-6
10.1007/BF00329755
10.1016/j.agee.2005.09.012
10.1016/j.agee.2009.08.012
10.14358/PERS.74.6.725
10.1111/j.1523-1739.2006.00344.x
10.1111/gcb.13314
10.1016/j.landurbplan.2010.11.005
10.3390/f5071737
10.1111/btp.12181
10.1007/BF00993001
10.1371/journal.pone.0053009
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2009.00569.x
10.1111/btp.12386
10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2010.12.019
10.2307/1942495
10.1890/03-5321
10.1023/A:1009879505765
10.1038/nature16512
10.1007/s10531-005-4877-z
10.1016/j.foreco.2018.08.014
10.1111/j.1523-1739.2006.00427.x
10.1111/btp.12259
10.1111/j.1654-1103.2006.tb02442.x
10.1016/j.foreco.2013.04.024
10.1111/conl.12768
10.1590/S1981-81222013000300013
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2010.00715.x
10.1002/ecy.2122
10.2307/1938810
10.1046/j.1365-2664.2003.00819.x
10.1007/s10021-017-0168-2
10.1111/btp.12393
10.1111/jvs.12457
10.1007/BF01373877
10.1007/s100210000060
10.1016/j.apsoil.2005.02.012
10.1007/BF00038691
10.1016/j.foreco.2008.03.021
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2011.00779.x
10.1007/s10745-008-9207-0
10.1111/geb.12663
10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117822
10.1177/194008291100400308
10.1590/2179-8087.069017
10.1079/9780851999142.0073
10.1007/s00442-004-1788-8
10.1017/S0266467400003989
10.1080/14728028.2019.1579673
10.3390/f5123022
10.1111/j.1523-1739.2007.00863.x
10.1016/j.foreco.2020.118398
10.1016/j.agee.2010.11.021
10.1016/S0378-1127(03)00109-9
10.1890/0012-9658(2001)082[2547:HTSDAR]2.0.CO;2
10.1016/j.foreco.2013.03.025
10.1016/j.agsy.2007.06.002
10.1016/S0378-1127(00)00361-3
10.1111/1365-2745.12623
10.1007/s10113-010-0128-2
10.1016/S0367-2530(17)30816-2
10.1111/j.1744-7429.1998.tb00057.x
10.2307/3545745
10.1046/j.1365-3180.1996.d01-6.x
10.1007/BF00121013
10.1890/15-1397.1
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2007.00274.x
10.1046/j.1526-100x.2000.80049.x
10.1038/nature12525
10.1111/btp.12536
10.1890/09-0636.1
10.1016/j.ppees.2010.09.002
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2011.00773.x
10.2307/3544208
10.1007/s11056-010-9242-8
10.1007/s10531-010-9813-1
10.1016/j.geoderma.2010.07.013
10.1016/j.funeco.2017.11.006
10.1111/j.1654-1103.2003.tb02144.x
10.1111/j.0030-1299.2004.13250.x
10.2737/SRS-RB-119
10.1111/j.1365-2745.2010.01742.x
10.1111/btp.12287
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2001.tb00214.x
10.1126/sciadv.1701345
10.1023/A:1006215430432
10.1371/journal.pone.0171368
10.1016/S0378-1127(98)00494-0
10.1016/0169-5347(96)81090-1
10.1023/A:1009726421352
10.1016/j.foreco.2013.03.046
10.1007/s11056-017-9590-8
10.1002/ecy.1734
10.1007/s10745-009-9258-x
10.1007/s00267-010-9611-2
10.1023/A:1023262109867
10.1055/s-2004-821269
10.1073/pnas.1500403112
10.1038/17946
10.1111/1365-2664.13484
10.4324/9780203071649
10.1016/j.foreco.2009.06.023
10.1111/j.1469-1795.2009.00322.x
10.1002/eap.1653
10.1098/rstb.2006.1990
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2012.00908.x
10.2307/2260567
10.1016/S0378-1127(01)00693-4
10.1080/10549811.2011.588457
10.1007/BF01985718
10.1017/S0266467400010038
10.1016/j.soilbio.2004.07.031
10.1023/B:FRES.0000019470.93637.54
10.1016/j.foreco.2008.10.036
10.1038/s41559-019-0882-6
10.1505/146554815815834796
10.1111/j.1526-100X.1994.tb00054.x
10.1016/j.catena.2018.02.018
10.1016/S0378-1127(99)00337-0
10.1016/j.foreco.2010.08.027
10.2307/1939128
10.1017/S0266467400007471
10.1007/s10021-001-0033-0
10.1080/17550874.2010.484555
10.2307/3565409
10.1046/j.1526-100X.1999.72022.x
10.1017/S0266467405002543
10.1163/15685411-00003325
10.1016/S0378-1127(00)00535-1
10.1088/1748-9326/aa708b
10.1111/avsc.12161
10.1890/01-6006
10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01332.x
10.1016/j.agsy.2005.11.001
10.1007/s10980-015-0267-4
10.1016/j.agee.2004.07.002
10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.37.091305.110246
10.1111/j.1526-100X.1995.tb00092.x
10.1016/j.jag.2015.11.018
10.1016/j.agee.2006.07.012
10.1890/10-0097.1
10.1016/0167-8809(94)00531-I
10.1002/eap.1462
10.1023/A:1007985915187
10.1046/j.1523-1739.1995.09040915.x
10.2307/2260425
10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02653.x
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2007.00342.x
10.1007/BF00017672
10.1016/j.foreco.2007.04.017
10.1046/j.1526-100X.1998.00638.x
10.7208/chicago/9780226118109.001.0001
10.1046/j.1365-2745.1998.00306.x
10.1016/B978-0-12-440405-2.50014-2
10.1046/j.1461-0248.2003.00440.x
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2009.00599.x
10.1016/S0169-5347(02)02491-6
10.1023/A:1020507631848
10.1111/j.1365-2745.2010.01739.x
10.5751/ES-01707-110202
10.1017/S0266467411000253
10.1007/s11258-011-0003-3
10.1007/s10980-009-9338-8
10.1093/biosci/biv108
10.3389/ffgc.2020.560912
10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01373.x
10.1002/ecy.1499
10.1029/2011JG001841
10.1111/1365-2664.13501
10.1023/A:1009825211430
10.1126/science.1103179
10.1126/sciadv.aau3114
10.1177/194008291500800402
10.1007/s11056-017-9586-4
10.1126/science.1201609
10.1890/1540-9295(2005)003[0365:LOFSCA]2.0.CO;2
10.1111/btp.12381
10.1007/s10533-012-9742-z
10.1046/j.1365-2745.2001.00583.x
10.1371/journal.pone.0181092
10.1111/j.1600-0706.2010.18335.x
10.1017/S0266467405002439
10.1016/j.foreco.2010.07.004
10.1016/j.foreco.2017.03.020
10.1007/s10980-010-9486-x
10.1029/2007JG000568
10.2307/2389094
10.2307/2259689
10.1016/j.cosust.2013.07.010
10.1007/s004420100801
10.1080/17550874.2012.716088
10.1007/BF00044863
10.1016/j.foreco.2012.09.016
10.1890/1051-0761(2002)012[1344:LUHEAT]2.0.CO;2
10.1371/journal.pone.0082433
10.1111/emr.12277
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00159.x
10.1111/j.1600-0706.2011.19992.x
10.1007/s00267-014-0431-7
10.1016/0167-8809(95)00653-2
10.1111/j.1365-2664.2007.01411.x
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2009.09.007
10.1016/j.agee.2015.11.013
10.1023/A:1012672005360
10.1016/j.gca.2010.11.029
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2005.00063.x
10.1007/s00572-008-0203-4
10.1890/1051-0761(1999)009[0998:SDAPFS]2.0.CO;2
10.1017/S0266467404002007
10.1890/04-0841
10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.05.030
10.3389/ffgc.2020.00085
10.1023/A:1024120600816
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2006.00100.x
10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117499
10.1890/03-0564
10.1111/1365-2745.13263
10.1111/j.1442-9993.2007.01766.x
10.1016/j.foreco.2009.09.030
10.1016/0378-1127(95)03575-U
10.1111/btp.12126
10.1073/pnas.0705005104
10.5751/ES-04275-160315
10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110316-022944
10.1016/j.foreco.2008.10.031
10.1023/A:1021250306481
10.1046/j.1526-100x.2000.80056.x
10.1007/s00442-013-2740-6
10.1017/S0266467409005823
10.1088/1748-9326/ab76db
10.1111/1365-2745.12351
10.2307/2261011
10.1111/btp.12230
10.1016/j.agee.2003.11.011
10.1017/S0266467417000049
10.1111/1365-2745.12298
10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00167.x
10.1146/annurev.es.13.110182.001221
10.1016/j.jaridenv.2016.04.006
10.1023/A:1020365507324
10.1016/j.pedobi.2003.12.006
10.1038/ncomms11666
10.1371/journal.pone.0123741
10.2307/3237285
10.1890/03-0655
10.1186/s13717-017-0101-9
10.1890/09-1350.1
10.1016/j.biocon.2016.07.031
10.1126/sciadv.1501639
10.1111/btp.12143
10.1111/gcb.12947
10.1007/BF02377111
10.1016/S0378-1127(99)00055-9
10.1016/S0169-5347(00)02033-4
10.2307/2388198
10.1017/S0266467400001656
10.1016/j.pecon.2019.12.004
10.1016/S0038-0717(02)00161-X
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright 2021 The Authors. published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Cambridge Philosophical Society.
2021 The Authors. Biological Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Cambridge Philosophical Society.
2021. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.
Copyright_xml – notice: 2021 The Authors. published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Cambridge Philosophical Society.
– notice: 2021 The Authors. Biological Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Cambridge Philosophical Society.
– notice: 2021. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.
DBID 24P
AAYXX
CITATION
NPM
7QG
7SN
7SS
C1K
7X8
5PM
DOI 10.1111/brv.12694
DatabaseName Wiley Online Library Journals (Open Access)
CrossRef
PubMed
Animal Behavior Abstracts
Ecology Abstracts
Entomology Abstracts (Full archive)
Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management
MEDLINE - Academic
PubMed Central (Full Participant titles)
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
PubMed
Entomology Abstracts
Ecology Abstracts
Animal Behavior Abstracts
Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management
MEDLINE - Academic
DatabaseTitleList Entomology Abstracts
MEDLINE - Academic
CrossRef

PubMed

Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: 24P
  name: Wiley Online Library Open Access
  url: https://authorservices.wiley.com/open-science/open-access/browse-journals.html
  sourceTypes: Publisher
– sequence: 2
  dbid: NPM
  name: PubMed
  url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed
  sourceTypes: Index Database
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Biology
DocumentTitleAlternate Land‐use effects on secondary succession
EISSN 1469-185X
EndPage 1134
ExternalDocumentID PMC8360101
33709566
10_1111_brv_12694
BRV12694
Genre article
Journal Article
GrantInformation_xml – fundername: Dutch research council ‐ NWO
  funderid: NewFOR 17418
– fundername: Netherlands Organization for International Cooperation in Higher Education
  funderid: PhD.11/606
– fundername: European Research Council
  funderid: PANTROP/ERC.834775
– fundername: Interdisciplinary Research and Education Fund‐INREF
  funderid: FOREFRONT(WUR)
– fundername: European Research Council
  funderid: FP7‐771056‐LICCI
– fundername: Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico
  funderid: SinBiose 441271/2019‐5
– fundername: Interdisciplinary Research and Education Fund-INREF
  grantid: FOREFRONT(WUR)
– fundername: Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico
  grantid: SinBiose 441271/2019-5
– fundername: Netherlands Organization for International Cooperation in Higher Education
  grantid: PhD.11/606
– fundername: European Research Council
  grantid: PANTROP/ERC.834775
– fundername: European Research Council
  grantid: FP7-771056-LICCI
– fundername: Dutch research council - NWO
  grantid: NewFOR 17418
– fundername: ;
  grantid: SinBiose 441271/2019‐5
– fundername: ;
  grantid: FP7‐771056‐LICCI
– fundername: Interdisciplinary Research and Education Fund‐INREF
  grantid: FOREFRONT(WUR)
– fundername: Dutch research council ‐ NWO
  grantid: NewFOR 17418
– fundername: ;
  grantid: PhD.11/606
– fundername: ;
  grantid: PANTROP/ERC.834775
GroupedDBID ---
-~X
.3N
.GA
.GJ
.Y3
05W
0R~
10A
1OB
1OC
23N
24P
31~
33P
36B
3SF
4.4
50Y
50Z
51W
51X
52M
52N
52O
52P
52R
52S
52T
52U
52V
52W
52X
53G
5GY
5HH
5LA
5VS
66C
6J9
702
7PT
8-0
8-1
8-3
8-4
8-5
8UM
930
A01
A03
AAESR
AAEVG
AAHBH
AAHHS
AAHQN
AAIPD
AAMNL
AANHP
AANLZ
AAONW
AASGY
AAXRX
AAYCA
AAZKR
ABCQN
ABCQX
ABCUV
ABEML
ABITZ
ABJNI
ABLJU
ABPVW
ABQWH
ABVKB
ABXGK
ACAHQ
ACBWZ
ACCFJ
ACCZN
ACFBH
ACGFS
ACGOD
ACGOF
ACMXC
ACPOU
ACPRK
ACQPF
ACRPL
ACSCC
ACXBN
ACXQS
ACYXJ
ADBBV
ADBTR
ADEOM
ADIZJ
ADKYN
ADMGS
ADNMO
ADOZA
ADXAS
ADZMN
ADZOD
AEEZP
AEIGN
AEIMD
AENEX
AEQDE
AEUQT
AEUYR
AFBPY
AFFPM
AFGKR
AFKSM
AFPWT
AFRAH
AFWVQ
AFZJQ
AHBTC
AHEFC
AIACR
AITYG
AIURR
AIWBW
AJBDE
ALAGY
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALUQN
ALVPJ
AMBMR
AMYDB
ASPBG
ATUGU
AVWKF
AZBYB
AZFZN
AZVAB
BAFTC
BDRZF
BFHJK
BHBCM
BIYOS
BMXJE
BROTX
BRXPI
BY8
C45
CAG
CHEAL
COF
CS3
D-6
D-7
D-E
D-F
DCZOG
DPXWK
DR2
DRFUL
DRMAN
DRSTM
DU5
EBD
EBS
EJD
EMB
EMOBN
EX3
F00
F01
F04
F5P
FEDTE
FUBAC
G-S
G.N
GODZA
H.X
HF~
HGLYW
HVGLF
HZ~
H~9
IX1
J0M
K48
KBYEO
L7B
L98
LATKE
LC2
LC3
LEEKS
LH4
LITHE
LOXES
LP6
LP7
LUTES
LW6
LYRES
MEWTI
MK4
MRFUL
MRMAN
MRSTM
MSFUL
MSMAN
MSSTM
MVM
MXFUL
MXMAN
MXSTM
N04
N05
N9A
NF~
O66
O9-
OIG
OVD
P2W
P2X
P2Z
P4B
P4D
PALCI
PQQKQ
Q.N
Q11
QB0
R.K
RCA
RIG
RIWAO
RJQFR
ROL
RX1
RXW
SUPJJ
SV3
TAE
TEORI
TN5
UB1
UPT
W8V
W99
WBKPD
WH7
WIH
WIJ
WIK
WNSPC
WOHZO
WOW
WQJ
WRC
WXI
WXSBR
WYISQ
X6Y
XG1
XOL
XSW
YZZ
ZXP
~02
~IA
~WT
AAYXX
ABGDZ
AEYWJ
AGHNM
AGQPQ
AGYGG
CITATION
NPM
7QG
7SN
7SS
AAMMB
AEFGJ
AGXDD
AIDQK
AIDYY
C1K
7X8
5PM
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c5094-ba058da29cef57e6570ee01204fb096a025e5af5e9d584800804ce9a785155813
IEDL.DBID 24P
ISSN 1464-7931
1469-185X
IngestDate Thu Aug 21 14:09:09 EDT 2025
Fri Jul 11 07:19:35 EDT 2025
Wed Aug 13 08:10:53 EDT 2025
Wed Feb 19 02:28:22 EST 2025
Thu Apr 24 23:01:24 EDT 2025
Tue Jul 01 03:31:12 EDT 2025
Wed Jan 22 16:29:16 EST 2025
IsDoiOpenAccess true
IsOpenAccess true
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 4
Keywords ecosystem functioning
secondary succession
tropical forests
forest restoration
ecological filter
natural regeneration
resilience
human-modified landscapes
Language English
License Attribution-NonCommercial
2021 The Authors. Biological Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Cambridge Philosophical Society.
This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c5094-ba058da29cef57e6570ee01204fb096a025e5af5e9d584800804ce9a785155813
Notes ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 14
ObjectType-Review-3
content type line 23
ORCID 0000-0002-8130-852X
OpenAccessLink https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fbrv.12694
PMID 33709566
PQID 2572539908
PQPubID 36769
PageCount 21
ParticipantIDs pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_8360101
proquest_miscellaneous_2501258580
proquest_journals_2572539908
pubmed_primary_33709566
crossref_primary_10_1111_brv_12694
crossref_citationtrail_10_1111_brv_12694
wiley_primary_10_1111_brv_12694_BRV12694
ProviderPackageCode CITATION
AAYXX
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate August 2021
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2021-08-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 08
  year: 2021
  text: August 2021
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationPlace Oxford, UK
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Oxford, UK
– name: England
– name: Cambridge
PublicationTitle Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
PublicationTitleAlternate Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc
PublicationYear 2021
Publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Publisher_xml – name: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
References 2001; 144
2004; 200
2010; 98
1984; 65
2019; 12
1980; 43
1999; 47
1988; 76
2008; 36
1999; 45
2020; 15
2004; 6
2012; 18
2017; 393
2016a; 27
2012; 14
2005b; 15
2001; 148
1996; 76
2001; 147
2020; 18
2009; 408
2000; 16
2004; 36
2019; 26
2019; 28
2013; 112
2020b
2008; 22
2008; 113
2010; 3
2016; 48
2016; 47
2003; 166
2012; 20
1998; 13
2011; 120
1995; 52
2016; 209
2018; 106
1987; 50
2004; 48
1995; 54
2016; 201
1964; 21
2011; 4
2004; 305
2012; 31
2007; 15
2006; 113
1987; 68
1987; 69
2001; 156
2016; 7
2016; 2
2015; 112
2003; 183
2008; 45
1999; 31
2020; 22
2005; 3
2001; 33
2008; 255
2011; 262
2011; 140
2018; 99
2011; 261
1998; 6
1999; 118
2016; 27
2016; 26
1998; 9
2016; 22
1987; 75
2017; 48
2019; 56
2002; 55
2004; 68
2011; 99
1999; 124
2016; 104
2008; 74
2007; 32
2014; 5
2005a; 86
2020; 3
1996; 28
2001
2005; 143
1997; 97
2017; 33
2010; 159
2001; 16
2003; 1
2014; 9
1996; 27
2014; 7
2007; 247
1992; 80
2004; 85
2011; 213
2011; 333
1994; 115
2020; 460
2010
2013; 45
2006; 11
2017; 27
2002; 34
2013; 303
2006; 17
2017; 21
2013; 302
2006; 14
2007; 362
2013; 304
2006; 15
1981; 69
2008
2005
2008; 96
1999; 145
1996; 58
1981; 60
2015; 8
2020; 108
1998; 193
2018; 430
2007; 119
1991; 23
2000; 148
2017; 12
2010; 135
2016; 132
2020; 475
2015
2017; 18
2014
2018; 50
1999; 398
2010; 91
2011; 222
2014b; 174
2014; 77
2010; 12
2007; 104
2002; 17
2010; 10
2018; 165
2006; 31
2002; 18
2010; 13
2010; 19
2010; 18
2006; 38
2000; 139
2002; 12
1997; 47
2007; 72
2013; 8
2016a; 125
2013; 5
1998; 86
2016; 381
2009; 12
2010; 20
2018; 2
2006; 20
2010; 25
2005; 106
2011; 65
2019; 433
2009; 19
2018; 32
2003; 40
1989
2009; 17
1995; 9
2018; 28
2019; 3
2019; 5
2002; 130
2012b; 145
2015; 55
2013; 502
1998
2016; 97
2011; 77
2014; 46
1995; 3
2018; 27
1996; 12
1996; 11
2010; 42
2020a; 13
2015; 64
1997; 37
2015; 65
2013; 172
2012; 117
1990; 6
2005; 13
2019; 450
2017; 6
1982; 13
1993; 9
2009; 40
2017; 3
2015; 103
2000; 3
2015; 31
2000; 8
1995; 77
2003; 14
2013; 287
2005; 21
2016b; 218
2001; 89
1995; 176
2011; 16
1999; 80
2003; 12
1990; 84
2015; 47
2016b; 48
2000; 52
1982; 8
2005; 37
2011; 27
2012a; 121
2009; 23
2012; 82
2006; 90
2009; 25
2009; 24
2015; 17
2004; 103
2012; 267
2015; 18
2008; 19
1997; 132
2015; 10
1999; 7
2004; 107
2009; 258
2005; 46
1999; 9
2001; 82
2002; 161
2017; 92
2007; 192
2001; 4
2004; 14
2017; 98
2002; 167
2015; 21
2011; 42
2016; 530
1983; 40
2014a; 46
2011; 48
1998; 30
2012; 7
1994; 2
2009; 37
e_1_2_8_241_1
e_1_2_8_287_1
e_1_2_8_264_1
e_1_2_8_309_1
e_1_2_8_26_1
e_1_2_8_49_1
e_1_2_8_203_1
e_1_2_8_249_1
e_1_2_8_226_1
e_1_2_8_132_1
e_1_2_8_155_1
e_1_2_8_178_1
Rudel T. K. (e_1_2_8_238_1) 2010
e_1_2_8_9_1
e_1_2_8_117_1
e_1_2_8_170_1
e_1_2_8_193_1
e_1_2_8_290_1
e_1_2_8_64_1
e_1_2_8_87_1
e_1_2_8_301_1
e_1_2_8_41_1
Guevara S. (e_1_2_8_112_1) 2004; 36
e_1_2_8_230_1
e_1_2_8_276_1
e_1_2_8_253_1
e_1_2_8_15_1
e_1_2_8_38_1
e_1_2_8_291_1
e_1_2_8_299_1
e_1_2_8_143_1
e_1_2_8_166_1
e_1_2_8_189_1
e_1_2_8_91_1
e_1_2_8_99_1
e_1_2_8_105_1
e_1_2_8_128_1
e_1_2_8_181_1
e_1_2_8_53_1
e_1_2_8_76_1
e_1_2_8_30_1
e_1_2_8_242_1
e_1_2_8_265_1
e_1_2_8_25_1
e_1_2_8_280_1
e_1_2_8_48_1
Perz S. G. (e_1_2_8_214_1) 2010
e_1_2_8_227_1
e_1_2_8_288_1
e_1_2_8_204_1
e_1_2_8_133_1
e_1_2_8_179_1
e_1_2_8_110_1
Hecht S. B. (e_1_2_8_118_1) 2015
e_1_2_8_171_1
Kaiser D. (e_1_2_8_140_1) 2015; 64
e_1_2_8_302_1
e_1_2_8_86_1
e_1_2_8_194_1
e_1_2_8_63_1
e_1_2_8_40_1
e_1_2_8_156_1
Guevara S. (e_1_2_8_113_1) 2005; 46
e_1_2_8_231_1
e_1_2_8_254_1
e_1_2_8_14_1
e_1_2_8_292_1
e_1_2_8_37_1
e_1_2_8_239_1
e_1_2_8_216_1
e_1_2_8_277_1
e_1_2_8_144_1
e_1_2_8_90_1
e_1_2_8_121_1
e_1_2_8_98_1
e_1_2_8_106_1
e_1_2_8_182_1
e_1_2_8_75_1
e_1_2_8_52_1
e_1_2_8_167_1
e_1_2_8_28_1
e_1_2_8_243_1
e_1_2_8_220_1
Hughes R. F. (e_1_2_8_129_1) 1999; 80
e_1_2_8_281_1
e_1_2_8_228_1
e_1_2_8_266_1
e_1_2_8_205_1
e_1_2_8_289_1
e_1_2_8_81_1
e_1_2_8_111_1
e_1_2_8_7_1
e_1_2_8_20_1
e_1_2_8_43_1
e_1_2_8_89_1
e_1_2_8_119_1
e_1_2_8_172_1
e_1_2_8_195_1
e_1_2_8_303_1
e_1_2_8_134_1
e_1_2_8_157_1
Peterson C. J. (e_1_2_8_215_1) 2008
e_1_2_8_17_1
e_1_2_8_232_1
e_1_2_8_293_1
e_1_2_8_270_1
e_1_2_8_217_1
e_1_2_8_255_1
e_1_2_8_278_1
e_1_2_8_70_1
e_1_2_8_122_1
e_1_2_8_160_1
e_1_2_8_32_1
e_1_2_8_55_1
e_1_2_8_78_1
e_1_2_8_107_1
e_1_2_8_183_1
e_1_2_8_145_1
e_1_2_8_168_1
e_1_2_8_93_1
e_1_2_8_221_1
e_1_2_8_282_1
e_1_2_8_27_1
Daniels A. E. (e_1_2_8_66_1) 2010
e_1_2_8_229_1
e_1_2_8_244_1
e_1_2_8_267_1
e_1_2_8_206_1
e_1_2_8_80_1
e_1_2_8_8_1
e_1_2_8_42_1
e_1_2_8_88_1
e_1_2_8_65_1
e_1_2_8_173_1
e_1_2_8_304_1
e_1_2_8_158_1
e_1_2_8_196_1
e_1_2_8_135_1
e_1_2_8_39_1
e_1_2_8_210_1
e_1_2_8_271_1
e_1_2_8_294_1
e_1_2_8_16_1
e_1_2_8_218_1
e_1_2_8_233_1
e_1_2_8_256_1
e_1_2_8_279_1
e_1_2_8_92_1
e_1_2_8_100_1
e_1_2_8_161_1
e_1_2_8_31_1
e_1_2_8_77_1
e_1_2_8_54_1
e_1_2_8_108_1
e_1_2_8_184_1
e_1_2_8_123_1
e_1_2_8_169_1
e_1_2_8_146_1
e_1_2_8_283_1
e_1_2_8_68_1
e_1_2_8_260_1
Lakshmipathy R. (e_1_2_8_150_1) 2012; 14
e_1_2_8_222_1
e_1_2_8_207_1
Helmer E. H. (e_1_2_8_120_1) 2008; 113
e_1_2_8_245_1
e_1_2_8_268_1
e_1_2_8_5_1
e_1_2_8_151_1
e_1_2_8_45_1
e_1_2_8_136_1
e_1_2_8_159_1
e_1_2_8_174_1
e_1_2_8_197_1
e_1_2_8_60_1
e_1_2_8_83_1
e_1_2_8_305_1
e_1_2_8_19_1
e_1_2_8_295_1
e_1_2_8_109_1
e_1_2_8_272_1
e_1_2_8_57_1
e_1_2_8_211_1
e_1_2_8_234_1
e_1_2_8_257_1
e_1_2_8_95_1
e_1_2_8_219_1
e_1_2_8_162_1
e_1_2_8_11_1
e_1_2_8_34_1
e_1_2_8_101_1
e_1_2_8_124_1
e_1_2_8_147_1
e_1_2_8_185_1
e_1_2_8_72_1
e_1_2_8_284_1
e_1_2_8_261_1
e_1_2_8_200_1
e_1_2_8_223_1
Benítez‐Malvido J. (e_1_2_8_22_1) 2001
e_1_2_8_246_1
e_1_2_8_269_1
e_1_2_8_152_1
e_1_2_8_208_1
e_1_2_8_6_1
e_1_2_8_21_1
e_1_2_8_67_1
e_1_2_8_44_1
e_1_2_8_137_1
e_1_2_8_175_1
e_1_2_8_306_1
e_1_2_8_82_1
e_1_2_8_114_1
e_1_2_8_198_1
e_1_2_8_18_1
e_1_2_8_273_1
e_1_2_8_296_1
Brandeis T. J. (e_1_2_8_29_1) 2007
e_1_2_8_250_1
e_1_2_8_79_1
e_1_2_8_212_1
e_1_2_8_235_1
e_1_2_8_258_1
e_1_2_8_94_1
e_1_2_8_163_1
e_1_2_8_10_1
e_1_2_8_56_1
e_1_2_8_310_1
e_1_2_8_33_1
e_1_2_8_102_1
e_1_2_8_148_1
e_1_2_8_186_1
e_1_2_8_71_1
e_1_2_8_125_1
e_1_2_8_262_1
e_1_2_8_307_1
e_1_2_8_285_1
e_1_2_8_24_1
e_1_2_8_47_1
e_1_2_8_224_1
e_1_2_8_201_1
e_1_2_8_247_1
e_1_2_8_3_1
e_1_2_8_130_1
e_1_2_8_153_1
e_1_2_8_209_1
e_1_2_8_138_1
e_1_2_8_62_1
e_1_2_8_85_1
e_1_2_8_115_1
e_1_2_8_176_1
e_1_2_8_199_1
e_1_2_8_251_1
e_1_2_8_297_1
e_1_2_8_274_1
e_1_2_8_13_1
e_1_2_8_36_1
e_1_2_8_59_1
e_1_2_8_190_1
e_1_2_8_213_1
e_1_2_8_259_1
e_1_2_8_236_1
e_1_2_8_141_1
e_1_2_8_164_1
e_1_2_8_97_1
e_1_2_8_311_1
e_1_2_8_149_1
e_1_2_8_51_1
e_1_2_8_74_1
e_1_2_8_103_1
e_1_2_8_126_1
e_1_2_8_187_1
e_1_2_8_240_1
e_1_2_8_263_1
e_1_2_8_286_1
e_1_2_8_308_1
e_1_2_8_46_1
e_1_2_8_69_1
e_1_2_8_180_1
e_1_2_8_202_1
e_1_2_8_225_1
e_1_2_8_248_1
e_1_2_8_154_1
e_1_2_8_4_1
e_1_2_8_131_1
e_1_2_8_192_1
e_1_2_8_300_1
e_1_2_8_116_1
e_1_2_8_23_1
e_1_2_8_139_1
e_1_2_8_84_1
e_1_2_8_61_1
e_1_2_8_177_1
e_1_2_8_252_1
e_1_2_8_275_1
e_1_2_8_298_1
e_1_2_8_35_1
e_1_2_8_58_1
e_1_2_8_191_1
e_1_2_8_237_1
e_1_2_8_165_1
e_1_2_8_96_1
e_1_2_8_142_1
e_1_2_8_127_1
e_1_2_8_12_1
e_1_2_8_73_1
e_1_2_8_50_1
e_1_2_8_104_1
e_1_2_8_188_1
References_xml – volume: 56
  start-page: 2675
  year: 2019
  end-page: 2686
  article-title: A new approach to map landscape variation in forest restoration success in tropical and temperate forest biomes
  publication-title: Journal of Applied Ecology
– volume: 69
  start-page: 109
  year: 1987
  end-page: 114
  article-title: A hierarchical consideration of causes and mechanisms of succession
  publication-title: Vegetatio
– volume: 106
  start-page: 27
  year: 2005
  end-page: 39
  article-title: Dynamics in landscape structure and composition for the Chorotega region, Costa Rica from 1960 to 2000
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
– volume: 6
  start-page: 1
  year: 1990
  end-page: 32
  article-title: Tropical secondary forests
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 19
  start-page: 187
  year: 2009
  end-page: 204
  article-title: Recovery of plant species richness and composition after slash‐and‐burn agriculture in a tropical rainforest in Madagascar
  publication-title: Biodiversity and Conservation
– volume: 31
  start-page: 601
  year: 2015
  end-page: 618
  article-title: Tropical forest regeneration following land abandonment is driven by primary rainforest distribution in an old pastoral region
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 98
  start-page: 625
  year: 2010
  end-page: 635
  article-title: Early successional woody plants facilitate and ferns inhibit forest development on Puerto Rican landslides
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 28
  start-page: 1
  year: 2019
  end-page: 16
  article-title: Potential of second‐growth Neotropical forests for forestry: the example of Puerto Rico
  publication-title: Forests, Trees and Livelihoods
– volume: 7
  start-page: 349
  year: 2014
  end-page: 358
  article-title: Age and light effects on seedling growth in two alternative secondary successions in Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Plant Ecology & Diversity
– volume: 17
  start-page: 233
  year: 2006
  end-page: 244
  article-title: Environment, disturbance history and rain forest composition across the islands of Tonga, Western Polynesia
  publication-title: Journal of Vegetation Science
– volume: 47
  start-page: 49
  year: 1997
  end-page: 57
  article-title: Nutrient input‐output budget of shifting agriculture in eastern Amazonia
  publication-title: Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems
– volume: 46
  start-page: 529
  year: 2014
  end-page: 537
  article-title: Shifts in dominance and species assemblages over two decades in alternative successions in Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 20
  start-page: 339
  year: 2012
  end-page: 345
  article-title: Leaf and soil nutrients in a chronosequence of second‐growth forest in central Amazônia: implications for restoration of abandoned lands
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 218
  start-page: 116
  year: 2016b
  end-page: 125
  article-title: Swiddens under transition: consequences of agricultural intensification in the Amazon
  publication-title: Agriculture Ecosystems & Environment
– volume: 22
  start-page: 2887
  year: 2016
  end-page: 2903
  article-title: Patterns of land use, extensification, and intensification of Brazilian agriculture
  publication-title: Global Change Biology
– volume: 398
  start-page: 32
  year: 1999
  end-page: 33
  article-title: Pasture damage by an Amazonian earthworm
  publication-title: Nature
– volume: 156
  start-page: 131
  year: 2001
  end-page: 137
  article-title: Post‐agriculture versus post‐hurricane succession in south eastern Nicaraguan rain forest
  publication-title: Plant Ecology
– volume: 36
  start-page: 891
  year: 2008
  end-page: 908
  article-title: International labor migration from a tropical development frontier: globalizing households and an incipient forest transition
  publication-title: Human Ecology
– volume: 18
  start-page: 261
  year: 2002
  end-page: 274
  article-title: The effect of forest successional stage on seed removal of tropical rain forest tree species
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 74
  start-page: 725
  year: 2008
  end-page: 735
  article-title: Integration of Hyperion satellite data and a household social survey to characterize the causes and consequences of reforestation patterns in the northern Ecuadorian Amazon
  publication-title: Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing
– volume: 28
  start-page: 373
  year: 2018
  end-page: 384
  article-title: Early ecological outcomes of natural regeneration and tree plantations for restoring agricultural landscapes
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– year: 2014
– start-page: 149
  year: 1989
  end-page: 209
– volume: 37
  start-page: 111
  year: 1997
  end-page: 119
  article-title: Weeds in slash‐and‐burn rice fields in northern Laos
  publication-title: Weed Research
– volume: 258
  start-page: 1014
  year: 2009
  end-page: 1024
  article-title: Succession and management of tropical dry forests in the Americas: review and new perspectives
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 40
  start-page: 613
  year: 2009
  end-page: 635
  article-title: The nitrogen paradox in tropical forest ecosystems
  publication-title: Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics
– volume: 3
  start-page: 217
  year: 2000
  end-page: 228
  article-title: Land‐use history and forest regeneration in the Cayey Mountains, Puerto Rico
  publication-title: Ecosystems
– volume: 2
  start-page: 1104
  year: 2018
  end-page: 1111
  article-title: Legume abundance along successional and rainfall gradients in Neotropical forests
  publication-title: Nature Ecology & Evolution
– volume: 65
  start-page: 849
  year: 2015
  end-page: 861
  article-title: Amazon rain forest succession: stochasticity or land‐use legacy?
  publication-title: Bioscience
– volume: 125
  start-page: 1386
  year: 2016a
  end-page: 1397
  article-title: Resilience of tropical dry forests – a meta‐analysis of changes in species diversity and composition during secondary succession
  publication-title: Oikos
– volume: 103
  start-page: 361
  year: 2015
  end-page: 373
  article-title: Root functional parameters along a land‐use gradient: evidence of a community‐level economics spectrum
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 302
  start-page: 54
  year: 2013
  end-page: 61
  article-title: Patterns of stocks of aboveground tree biomass, dynamics, and their determinants in secondary Andean forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 20
  start-page: 378
  year: 2012
  end-page: 386
  article-title: Testing the performance of fourteen native tropical tree species in two abandoned pastures of the Lacandon rainforest region of Chiapas, Mexico
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 304
  start-page: 99
  year: 2013
  end-page: 109
  article-title: Floristic composition, species diversity and carbon storage in charcoal and agriculture fallows and management implications in Miombo woodlands of Zambia
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 14
  start-page: 11
  year: 2006
  end-page: 20
  article-title: Principles of natural regeneration of tropical dry forests for restoration
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 43
  start-page: 5
  year: 1980
  end-page: 21
  article-title: The use of vital attributes to predict successional changes in plant communities subject to recurrent disturbances
  publication-title: Vegetatio
– volume: 77
  start-page: 65
  year: 1995
  end-page: 76
  article-title: Effects of land management and a recent hurricane on forest structure and composition in the Luquillo experimental Forest, Puerto Rico
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 132
  start-page: 107
  year: 1997
  end-page: 120
  article-title: Structure and floristics of secondary and old‐growth forest stands in lowland Costa Rica
  publication-title: Plant Ecology
– volume: 167
  start-page: 195
  year: 2002
  end-page: 207
  article-title: Tropical forest succession on abandoned farms in the Humacao municipality of eastern Puerto Rico
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 106
  start-page: 137
  year: 2018
  end-page: 147
  article-title: Soil‐mediated filtering organizes tree assemblages in regenerating tropical forests
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 17
  start-page: 91
  year: 2015
  end-page: 113
  article-title: Assessing the resilience of global seasonally dry tropical forests
  publication-title: International Forestry Review
– volume: 13
  start-page: 135
  year: 1998
  end-page: 148
  article-title: The impact of shifting cultivation on a rainforest landscape in West Kalimantan: spatial and temporal dynamics
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 460
  year: 2020
  article-title: Initial establishment of commercial tree species under enrichment planting in a Central Amazon secondary forest: effects of silvicultural treatments
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 89
  start-page: 528
  year: 2001
  end-page: 537
  article-title: Alternative successional pathways in the Amazon Basin
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 213
  start-page: 25
  year: 2011
  end-page: 34
  article-title: The relative importance of above‐ versus belowground competition for tree growth during early succession of a tropical moist forest
  publication-title: Plant Ecology
– volume: 3
  start-page: 85
  year: 2020
  article-title: Reversals of reforestation across Latin America limit climate mitigation potential of tropical forests
  publication-title: Frontiers in Forests and Global Change
– volume: 54
  start-page: 31
  year: 1995
  end-page: 43
  article-title: The fallow period as a weed‐break in shifting cultivation (tropical wet forests)
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
– volume: 200
  start-page: 227
  year: 2004
  end-page: 247
  article-title: Species composition, similarity and diversity in three successional stages of a seasonally dry tropical forest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 45
  start-page: 262
  year: 2013
  end-page: 271
  article-title: Deforestation and reforestation of Latin America and the Caribbean (2001–2010)
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 31
  start-page: 243
  year: 1999
  end-page: 254
  article-title: Isolated pasture trees and the vegetation under their canopies in the Chiapas coastal plain, Mexico
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 165
  start-page: 369
  year: 2018
  end-page: 380
  article-title: Land‐use type strongly shapes community composition, but not always diversity of soil microbes in tropical China
  publication-title: Catena
– volume: 258
  start-page: 2666
  year: 2009
  end-page: 2675
  article-title: Recovery of secondary forests on swidden cultivation fallows in Laos
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 12
  start-page: 1250
  year: 2009
  end-page: 1260
  article-title: Seed arrival, ecological filters, and plant species richness: a meta‐analysis
  publication-title: Ecology Letters
– volume: 7
  start-page: 341
  year: 2014
  end-page: 348
  article-title: Convergence and divergence in alternative successional pathways in Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Plant Ecology & Diversity
– volume: 450
  year: 2019
  article-title: Long‐term enrichment with the camedor palm ( Mart.) improved forest cover in an anthropogenic tropical landscape
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 91
  start-page: 2833
  year: 2010
  end-page: 2849
  article-title: Disturbance and landscape dynamics in a changing world
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 24
  start-page: 629
  year: 2009
  end-page: 642
  article-title: Forest recovery in a tropical landscape: what is the relative importance of biophysical, socioeconomic, and landscape variables?
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 27
  start-page: 110
  year: 2018
  end-page: 124
  article-title: Effects of forest degradation on microbial communities and soil carbon cycling: a global meta‐analysis
  publication-title: Global Ecology and Biogeography
– volume: 7
  start-page: 1
  year: 2016
  end-page: 8
  article-title: A global meta‐analysis on the ecological drivers of forest restoration success
  publication-title: Nature Communications
– volume: 80
  start-page: 275
  year: 1992
  end-page: 290
  article-title: Demography and allometry of , a neotropical pioneer tree‐an evaluation of the climax‐pioneer paradigm for tropical rain forests
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 23
  start-page: 1396
  year: 2009
  end-page: 1405
  article-title: Changing drivers of deforestation and new opportunities for conservation
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 192
  start-page: 303
  year: 2007
  end-page: 315
  article-title: Mechanisms of plant regeneration during succession after shifting cultivation in eastern Amazonia
  publication-title: Plant Ecology
– volume: 144
  start-page: 1
  year: 2001
  end-page: 17
  article-title: Land‐use and erosion of a Costa Rican Ultisol affect soil chemistry, mycorrhizal fungi and early regeneration
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 120
  start-page: 143
  year: 2011
  end-page: 151
  article-title: Contrasting community compensatory trends in alternative successional pathways in Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Oikos
– volume: 12
  start-page: 267
  year: 2010
  end-page: 275
  article-title: Pathways, mechanisms and predictability of vegetation change during tropical dry forest succession
  publication-title: Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics
– volume: 145
  start-page: 255
  year: 1999
  end-page: 265
  article-title: Seed rain from forest fragments into tropical pastures in los Tuxtlas, Mexico
  publication-title: Plant Ecology
– volume: 333
  start-page: 988
  year: 2011
  end-page: 993
  article-title: A large and persistent carbon sink in the world's forests
  publication-title: Science
– volume: 42
  start-page: 131
  year: 2011
  end-page: 148
  article-title: Early successional sites and the recovery of vegetation structure and tree species of the tropical dry forest in Veracruz, Mexico
  publication-title: New Forests
– volume: 3
  year: 2017
  article-title: Ecological restoration success is higher for natural regeneration than for active restoration in tropical forests
  publication-title: Science Advances
– volume: 121
  start-page: 1263
  year: 2012a
  end-page: 1270
  article-title: Disturbance regime changes the trait distribution, phylogenetic structure and community assembly of tropical rain forests
  publication-title: Oikos
– volume: 92
  start-page: 326
  year: 2017
  end-page: 340
  article-title: Multiple successional pathways in human‐modified tropical landscapes: new insights from forest succession, forest fragmentation and landscape ecology research
  publication-title: Biological Reviews
– volume: 27
  start-page: 305
  year: 1996
  end-page: 335
  article-title: Herbivory and plant defenses in tropical forests
  publication-title: Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics
– volume: 48
  start-page: 716
  year: 2016
  end-page: 730
  article-title: Natural regeneration as a tool for large‐scale forest restoration in the tropics: prospects and challenges
  publication-title: Biotropica
– start-page: 227
  year: 2010
  end-page: 252
– volume: 104
  start-page: 1466
  year: 2016
  end-page: 1477
  article-title: Land‐use history augments environment‐plant community relationship strength in a Puerto Rican wet forest
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 255
  start-page: 3716
  year: 2008
  end-page: 3725
  article-title: Interacting effects of canopy gap, understory vegetation and leaf litter on tree seedling recruitment and composition in tropical secondary forests
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– year: 2020b
  article-title: Associations between socio‐environmental factors and landscape‐scale biodiversity recovery in naturally regenerating tropical and subtropical forests
  publication-title: Conservation Letters
– volume: 9
  start-page: 669
  year: 1998
  end-page: 678
  article-title: Soil seed bank composition along a forest chronosequence in seasonally moist tropical forest, Panama
  publication-title: Journal of Vegetation Science
– volume: 38
  start-page: 354
  year: 2006
  end-page: 364
  article-title: Recovery of a subtropical dry forest after abandonment of different land uses
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 47
  start-page: 468
  year: 2015
  end-page: 474
  article-title: Disturbance winners or losers? Plants bearing extrafloral nectaries in Brazilian Caatinga
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 147
  start-page: 245
  year: 2001
  end-page: 252
  article-title: Carbon and nutrient storage in primary and secondary forests in eastern Amazônia
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 15
  start-page: 1952
  year: 2005b
  end-page: 1967
  article-title: Change in species composition with repeated shifting cultivation: limited role of soil nutrients
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 13
  start-page: 325
  year: 2005
  end-page: 333
  article-title: Effects of mycorrhizae and non‐target organisms on restoration of a seasonal tropical forest in Quintana Roo, Mexico: factors limiting tree establishment
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 113
  start-page: 139
  year: 2006
  end-page: 149
  article-title: Linking yields of upland rice in shifting cultivation to fallow length and soil properties
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
– volume: 60
  start-page: 41
  year: 1981
  end-page: 64
  article-title: Soil nutrient status of hill agro‐ecosystems and recovery pattern after slash and burn agriculture (Jhum) in North‐Eastern India
  publication-title: Plant and Soil
– volume: 12
  year: 2017
  article-title: Land‐use dynamics influence estimates of carbon sequestration potential in tropical second‐growth forest
  publication-title: Environmental Research Letters
– volume: 258
  start-page: 971
  year: 2009
  end-page: 977
  article-title: Silvicultural treatments enhance growth rates of future crop trees in a tropical dry forest
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 12
  year: 2017
  article-title: Spatial and temporal dynamics of shifting cultivation in the middle‐Amazonas river: expansion and intensification
  publication-title: PLoS One
– volume: 8
  start-page: 863
  year: 2015
  end-page: 892
  article-title: Impact of shifting cultivation on dense tropical woodlands in Southeast Angola
  publication-title: Tropical Conservation Science
– volume: 130
  start-page: 297
  year: 2002
  end-page: 308
  article-title: Former land‐use and tree species affect nitrogen oxide emissions from a tropical dry forest
  publication-title: Oecologia
– volume: 14
  start-page: 903
  year: 2012
  end-page: 918
  article-title: Abundance and diversity of AM fungi across a gradient of land use intensity and their seasonal variations in Niligiri biosphere of the Western Ghats, India
  publication-title: Journal of Agricultural Science and Technology
– start-page: 73
  year: 2005
  end-page: 91
– volume: 27
  start-page: 504
  year: 2016
  end-page: 514
  article-title: Forest age and isolation affect the rate of recovery of plant species diversity and community composition in secondary rain forests in tropical Australia
  publication-title: Journal of Vegetation Science
– volume: 91
  start-page: 2121
  year: 2010
  end-page: 2131
  article-title: Nitrogen and phosphorus additions negatively affect tree species diversity in tropical forest regrowth trajectories
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 46
  start-page: 516
  year: 2014a
  end-page: 528
  article-title: The multiple impacts of leaf‐cutting ants and their novel ecological role in human‐modified neotropical forests
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 18
  start-page: 1904
  year: 2012
  end-page: 1917
  article-title: The influence of time, soil characteristics, and land‐use history on soil phosphorus legacies: a global meta‐analysis
  publication-title: Global Change Biology
– volume: 52
  start-page: 386
  year: 2000
  end-page: 397
  article-title: When fields revert to forest: development and spontaneous reforestation in post‐war Puerto Rico
  publication-title: The Professional Geographer
– volume: 47
  start-page: 18
  year: 2015
  end-page: 26
  article-title: Land‐use change dynamics, soil type and species forming mono‐dominant patches: the case of in a neotropical rain forest region
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 65
  start-page: 1476
  year: 1984
  end-page: 1490
  article-title: Succession and nutrient dynamics following forest cutting and burning in Amazonia
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 193
  start-page: 75
  year: 1998
  end-page: 97
  article-title: Tree architecture and secondary tropical rain forest development: a case study in Araracuara, Colombian Amazonia
  publication-title: Flora
– volume: 16
  year: 2011
  publication-title: Ecology and Society
– volume: 104
  start-page: 1518
  year: 2016
  end-page: 1526
  article-title: Ontogenetic responses of four plant species to additive and interactive effects of land‐use history, canopy structure and herbivory
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– year: 2015
– volume: 113
  year: 2008
  article-title: Factors influencing spatial pattern in tropical forest clearance and stand age: Implications for carbon storage and species diversity
  publication-title: Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
– volume: 161
  start-page: 75
  year: 2002
  end-page: 87
  article-title: Forest regeneration in abandoned coffee plantations and pastures in the cordillera central of Puerto Rico
  publication-title: Plant Ecology
– volume: 12
  start-page: 779
  year: 1996
  end-page: 788
  article-title: Effects of canopy species dominance on understorey light availability in low‐elevation secondary forest stands in Costa Rica
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 21
  start-page: 536
  year: 2017
  end-page: 550
  article-title: Carbon accumulation in neotropical dry secondary forests: the roles of forest age and tree dominance and diversity
  publication-title: Ecosystems
– volume: 15
  start-page: 620
  year: 2007
  end-page: 626
  article-title: Application of assisted natural regeneration to restore degraded tropical forestlands
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 12
  year: 2019
  article-title: The ephemerality of secondary forests in southern Costa Rica
  publication-title: Conservation Letters
– volume: 166
  start-page: 199
  year: 2003
  end-page: 205
  article-title: Seed regeneration mechanisms over fine spatial scales on recovering coffee plantation and pasture in Puerto Rico
  publication-title: Plant Ecology
– volume: 5
  start-page: 3022
  year: 2014
  end-page: 3030
  article-title: Current challenges and perspectives for governing forest restoration
  publication-title: Forests
– volume: 433
  start-page: 325
  year: 2019
  end-page: 331
  article-title: Drivers of biomass recovery in a secondary forested landscape of West Africa
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 22
  start-page: 8
  year: 2008
  end-page: 15
  article-title: Integrating agricultural landscapes with biodiversity conservation in the Mesoamerican hotspot
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 5
  start-page: 464
  year: 2013
  end-page: 470
  article-title: A conceptual framework for analysing and measuring land‐use intensity
  publication-title: Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability
– volume: 1
  start-page: 41
  year: 2003
  end-page: 52
  article-title: Banco de sementes de uma floresta secundária amazônica dominada por
  publication-title: Acta Amazonica
– volume: 108
  start-page: 160
  year: 2020
  end-page: 174
  article-title: Edaphic factors and initial conditions influence successional trajectories of early regenerating tropical dry forests
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 55
  start-page: 149
  year: 2002
  end-page: 159
  article-title: The relationship between length of fallow and crop yields in shifting cultivation: a rethinking
  publication-title: Agroforestry Systems
– volume: 55
  start-page: 536
  year: 2015
  end-page: 549
  article-title: Estimating the consequences of fire exclusion for food crop production, soil fertility, and fallow recovery in shifting cultivation landscapes in the humid tropics
  publication-title: Environmental Management
– volume: 124
  start-page: 93
  year: 1999
  end-page: 104
  article-title: Soil organic matter composition under primary forest, pasture, and secondary forest succession, region Huetar Norte, Costa Rica
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 261
  start-page: 1558
  year: 2011
  end-page: 1563
  article-title: When and where to actively restore ecosystems?
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 18
  start-page: 443
  year: 2015
  end-page: 455
  article-title: Ecological disturbance regimes caused by agricultural land uses and their effects on tropical forest regeneration
  publication-title: Applied Vegetation Science
– volume: 19
  start-page: 1933
  year: 2010
  end-page: 1961
  article-title: Secondary forests on anthropogenic soils in Brazilian Amazonia conserve agrobiodiversity
  publication-title: Biodiversity and Conservation
– volume: 117
  start-page: 1
  year: 2012
  end-page: 13
  article-title: Effect of repeated deforestation on vegetation dynamics for phosphorus‐limited tropical forests
  publication-title: Journal of Geophysical Research
– volume: 502
  start-page: 224
  year: 2013
  end-page: 227
  article-title: Key role of symbiotic dinitrogen fixation in tropical forest secondary succession
  publication-title: Nature
– volume: 38
  start-page: 287
  year: 2006
  end-page: 301
  article-title: The future of tropical forest species
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 82
  start-page: 39
  year: 2012
  end-page: 51
  article-title: State of the scientific knowledge on properties and genesis of anthropogenic dark earths in Central Amazonia (terra preta de Índio)
  publication-title: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
– volume: 40
  start-page: 423
  year: 2003
  end-page: 429
  article-title: Restoring tropical diversity: beating the time tax on species loss
  publication-title: Journal of Applied Ecology
– volume: 82
  start-page: 2547
  year: 2001
  end-page: 2559
  article-title: How tree species differ as recruitment foci in a tropical pasture
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 262
  start-page: 2207
  year: 2011
  end-page: 2218
  article-title: Intra and inter‐annual variation in seed rain in a secondary dry tropical forest excluded from chronic disturbance
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 21
  start-page: 397
  year: 2005
  end-page: 406
  article-title: Responses of seedling transplants to environmental variations in contrasting habitats of Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 6
  start-page: 33
  year: 2017
  article-title: Exclosures restored the density and root colonization of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in Tigray, northern Ethiopia
  publication-title: Ecological Processes
– volume: 21
  start-page: 127
  year: 2005
  end-page: 131
  article-title: Regeneration and population structure of Heliconia acuminata in Amazonian secondary forests with contrasting land‐use histories
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 303
  start-page: 35
  year: 2013
  end-page: 45
  article-title: Are functional traits good predictors of species performance in restoration plantings in tropical abandoned pastures?
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 139
  start-page: 93
  year: 2000
  end-page: 108
  article-title: Effects of soil fertility and land‐use on forest succession in Amazônia
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 48
  start-page: 809
  year: 2016
  end-page: 824
  article-title: Roles of non‐native species in large‐scale regeneration of moist tropical forests on anthropogenic grassland
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 103
  start-page: 67
  year: 2015
  end-page: 77
  article-title: Loss of secondary‐forest resilience by land‐use intensification in the Amazon
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 148
  start-page: 115
  year: 2000
  end-page: 125
  article-title: Forest recovery in abandoned agricultural lands in a karst region of The Dominican Republic
  publication-title: Plant Ecology
– volume: 362
  start-page: 273
  year: 2007
  end-page: 289
  article-title: Rates of change in tree communities of secondary Neotropical forests following major disturbances
  publication-title: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
– volume: 68
  start-page: 108
  year: 1987
  end-page: 116
  article-title: Herbivory in complex and simple tropical successional ecosystems
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 36
  start-page: 99
  year: 2004
  end-page: 108
  article-title: Rain forest regeneration beneath the canopy of fig trees isolated in pastures of Los Tuxtlas, Mexico
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 13
  year: 2020a
  article-title: Achieving cost‐effective landscape‐scale forest restoration through targeted natural regeneration
  publication-title: Conservation Letters
– volume: 15
  year: 2020
  article-title: Unmasking secondary vegetation dynamics in the Brazilian Amazon
  publication-title: Environmental Research Letters
– volume: 77
  start-page: 292
  year: 2014
  end-page: 303
  article-title: Microbial community structure varies across soil organic matter aggregate pools during tropical land cover change
  publication-title: Soil Biology and Biochemistry
– volume: 143
  start-page: 1
  year: 2005
  end-page: 10
  article-title: Effects of fire on properties of forest soils: a review
  publication-title: Oecologia
– volume: 33
  start-page: 155
  year: 2017
  end-page: 164
  article-title: Liana dynamics reflect land‐use history and hurricane response in a Puerto Rican forest
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 3
  start-page: 252
  year: 1995
  end-page: 260
  article-title: Early woody invasion under tree plantations in Costa Rica: implications for forest restoration
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 8
  start-page: 414
  year: 2000
  end-page: 424
  article-title: Seed availability as a limiting factor in forest recovery processes in Costa Rica
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 52
  start-page: 235
  year: 1995
  end-page: 249
  article-title: The ecological sustainability of slash‐and‐burn agriculture
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
– volume: 76
  start-page: 25
  year: 1996
  end-page: 39
  article-title: A comparative study of tree establishment in abandoned pasture and mature forest of eastern Amazonia
  publication-title: Oikos
– volume: 209
  start-page: 965
  year: 2016
  end-page: 977
  article-title: Higher survival drives the success of nitrogen‐fixing trees through succession in Costa Rican rainforests
  publication-title: New Phytologist
– volume: 104
  start-page: 20696
  year: 2007
  end-page: 20701
  article-title: Ecological feedbacks following deforestation create the potential for a catastrophic ecosystem shift in tropical dry forest
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
– volume: 10
  start-page: 233
  year: 2010
  end-page: 246
  article-title: Shifting maize cultivation and secondary vegetation in the southern Yucatán: successional forest impacts of temporal intensification
  publication-title: Regional Environmental Change
– volume: 69
  start-page: 631
  year: 1981
  end-page: 649
  article-title: Early plant succession after cutting and burning in the upper Rio Negro region of the Amazon basin
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 48
  start-page: 215
  year: 2004
  end-page: 226
  article-title: Plant influences on native and exotic earthworms during secondary succession in old tropical pastures
  publication-title: Pedobiologia
– volume: 65
  start-page: 85
  year: 2011
  end-page: 99
  article-title: Secondary forests on anthropogenic soils of the middle madeira river: valuation, local knowledge, and landscape domestication in Brazilian Amazonia
  publication-title: Economic Botany
– volume: 20
  start-page: 853
  year: 2006
  end-page: 860
  article-title: Effects of the surrounding matrix on tree recruitment in amazonian forest fragments
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 6
  start-page: 253
  year: 1998
  end-page: 261
  article-title: Do bird perching structures elevate seed rain and seedling establishment in abandoned tropical pasture?
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 90
  start-page: 62
  year: 2006
  end-page: 78
  article-title: Peasant emigration and land‐use change at the watershed level: a GIS‐based approach in Central Mexico
  publication-title: Agricultural Systems
– volume: 4
  start-page: 300
  year: 2011
  end-page: 316
  article-title: Seed rain and advance regeneration in secondary succession in the Brazilian Amazon
  publication-title: Tropical Conservation Science
– volume: 201
  start-page: 309
  year: 2016
  end-page: 313
  article-title: Evaluating climber cutting as a strategy to restore degraded tropical forests
  publication-title: Biological Conservation
– volume: 27
  start-page: 519
  year: 2017
  end-page: 531
  article-title: Cropping history trumps fallow duration in long‐term soil and vegetation dynamics of shifting cultivation systems
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 305
  start-page: 1915
  year: 2004
  end-page: 1916
  article-title: Globalization, migration, and Latin American ecosystems
  publication-title: Science
– volume: 40
  start-page: 131
  year: 1983
  end-page: 139
  article-title: Nitrogen dynamics during conversion of primary amazonian rain forest to slash and burn agriculture
  publication-title: Oikos
– volume: 7
  start-page: 288
  year: 1999
  end-page: 297
  article-title: The role of isolated trees in facilitating tree seedling recruitment at a degraded sub‐tropical rainforest site
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 6
  start-page: 746
  year: 2004
  end-page: 754
  article-title: Leaf traits and herbivory rates of tropical tree species differing in successional status
  publication-title: Plant Biology
– volume: 393
  start-page: 105
  year: 2017
  end-page: 112
  article-title: The effect of forest fragmentation on the soil seed bank of Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 84
  start-page: 314
  year: 1990
  end-page: 325
  article-title: Seed bank versus seed rain in the regeneration of a tropical pioneer tree
  publication-title: Oecologia
– volume: 23
  start-page: 219
  year: 1991
  end-page: 224
  article-title: Survival by sprouting following fire in tropical forests of the eastern Amazon
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 72
  start-page: 119
  year: 2007
– volume: 50
  start-page: 131
  year: 1987
  end-page: 135
  article-title: Interactions among processes controlling successional change
  publication-title: Oikos
– volume: 20
  start-page: 1270
  year: 2010
  end-page: 1284
  article-title: Interactive effects of land use history and natural disturbance on seedling dynamics in a subtropical forest
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 2
  start-page: 219
  year: 1994
  end-page: 229
  article-title: Barriers to lowland tropical forest restoration in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 17
  start-page: 117
  year: 2009
  end-page: 126
  article-title: Forest regeneration from pasture in the dry tropics of Panama: effects of cattle, exotic grass, and forested riparia
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 5
  start-page: 1737
  year: 2014
  end-page: 1752
  article-title: Challenges of governing second‐growth forests: a case study from the Brazilian Amazonian state of Pará
  publication-title: Forests
– volume: 76
  start-page: 682
  year: 1988
  end-page: 699
  article-title: Abandoned pastures in eastern Amazonia. II. Nutrient stocks in the soil and vegetation
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– year: 1998
– volume: 85
  start-page: 3313
  year: 2004
  end-page: 3326
  article-title: Factors affecting community composition on forest regeneration in deforested, abandoned land in Panama
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 27
  start-page: 477
  year: 2011
  end-page: 489
  article-title: Environmental changes during secondary succession in a tropical dry forest in Mexico
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 97
  start-page: 2772
  year: 2016
  end-page: 2779
  article-title: The importance of biodiversity and dominance for multiple ecosystem functions in a human‐modified tropical landscape
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 45
  start-page: 223
  year: 1999
  end-page: 241
  article-title: Response of secondary vegetation in eastern Amazonia to relaxed nutrient availability constraints
  publication-title: Biogeochemistry
– volume: 118
  start-page: 127
  year: 1999
  end-page: 138
  article-title: Relationship between soils and Amazon forest biomass: a landscape‐scale study
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 64
  start-page: 16
  year: 2015
  end-page: 31
  article-title: Species richness of termites (Blattoidea: Termitoidae) and ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) along disturbance gradients in semi‐arid Burkina Faso (West Africa)
  publication-title: Bonn Zoological Bulletin
– volume: 18
  start-page: 31
  year: 2020
  end-page: 36
  article-title: Fire drives abandoned pastures to a savanna‐like state in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
  publication-title: Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation
– volume: 140
  start-page: 148
  year: 2011
  end-page: 154
  article-title: Agricultural management affects earthworm and termite diversity across humid to semi‐arid tropical zones
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
– volume: 287
  start-page: 140
  year: 2013
  end-page: 146
  article-title: Tree seedling recruitment in Amazon secondary forest: importance of topography and gap micro‐site conditions
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 25
  start-page: 223
  year: 2009
  end-page: 227
  article-title: Decreasing abundance of leaf‐cutting ants across a chronosequence of advancing Atlantic forest regeneration
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 16
  start-page: 689
  year: 2000
  end-page: 708
  article-title: Secondary forest structure and biomass following short and extended land‐use in central and southern Amazonia
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 3
  start-page: 115
  year: 2020
  article-title: Glass half‐full or half‐empty? A fire‐resistant species triggers divergent regeneration in low‐resilience pastures
  publication-title: Frontiers in Forests and Global Change
– volume: 159
  start-page: 209
  year: 2010
  end-page: 215
  article-title: Asymmetric response to disturbance and recovery: changes of soil permeability under forest‐pasture‐forest transitions
  publication-title: Geoderma
– volume: 38
  start-page: 492
  year: 2006
  end-page: 499
  article-title: Land‐use history affects the distribution of the saprophytic orchid in Puerto Rico's Tabonuco Forest
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 261
  start-page: 1564
  year: 2011
  end-page: 1579
  article-title: Restoration of dry tropical forests in Central America: a review of pattern and process
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 11
  start-page: 119
  year: 1996
  end-page: 124
  article-title: Pattern and process in neotropical secondary rain forests: the first 100 years of succession
  publication-title: Trends in Ecology & Evolution
– volume: 148
  start-page: 185
  year: 2001
  end-page: 206
  article-title: Neotropical secondary forest succession: changes in structural and functional characteristics
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 112
  start-page: 8013
  year: 2015
  end-page: 8018
  article-title: Successional dynamics in Neotropical forests are as uncertain as they are predictable
  publication-title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
– volume: 475
  year: 2020
  article-title: Post‐agricultural succession in the fallow swiddens of southeastern Brazil
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– start-page: 185
  year: 2001
  end-page: 203
– volume: 183
  start-page: 265
  year: 2003
  end-page: 280
  article-title: Development of forest structure on cleared rainforest land in eastern Australia under different styles of reforestation
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 12
  start-page: 1913
  year: 2003
  end-page: 1919
  article-title: Effects of fire and agricultural practices on neotropical ant communities
  publication-title: Biodiversity and Conservation
– volume: 13
  start-page: 201
  year: 1982
  end-page: 228
  article-title: Ecology of seed dispersal
  publication-title: Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics
– volume: 48
  start-page: 497
  year: 2017
  end-page: 519
  article-title: Ecosystem processes and biogeochemical cycles in secondary tropical forest succession
  publication-title: Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics
– volume: 9
  start-page: 998
  year: 1999
  end-page: 1008
  article-title: Seed dispersal and potential forest succession in abandoned agriculture in tropical Africa
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 8
  year: 2013
  article-title: Succession of ephemeral secondary forests and their limited role for the conservation of floristic diversity in a human‐modified tropical landscape
  publication-title: PLoS One
– volume: 33
  start-page: 555
  year: 2001
  end-page: 565
  article-title: Landscape patterns of tropical Forest recovery in the republic of Palau1
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 48
  start-page: 745
  year: 2016
  end-page: 757
  article-title: Natural forest regeneration and ecological restoration in human‐modified tropical landscapes
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 15
  year: 2020
  article-title: Fostering natural forest regeneration on former agricultural land through economic and policy interventions
  publication-title: Environmental Research Letters Reviews
– volume: 530
  start-page: 211
  year: 2016
  end-page: 214
  article-title: Biomass resilience of Neotropical secondary forests
  publication-title: Nature
– volume: 37
  start-page: 215
  year: 2005
  end-page: 225
  article-title: Land use change and soil nutrient transformations in the los Haitises region of The Dominican Republic
  publication-title: Soil Biology and Biochemistry
– volume: 32
  start-page: 789
  year: 2007
  end-page: 797
  article-title: Recovery from clearing, cyclone and fire in rain forests of Tonga, South Pacific: vegetation dynamics 1995–2005
  publication-title: Austral Ecology
– volume: 50
  start-page: 510
  year: 2018
  end-page: 519
  article-title: Comparing forest structure and biodiversity on private and public land: secondary tropical dry forests in Costa Rica
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 26
  year: 2019
  article-title: Small‐scale Management of Secondary Forests in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
  publication-title: Floresta e Ambiente
– volume: 48
  start-page: 890
  year: 2016
  end-page: 899
  article-title: The role of natural regeneration to ecosystem services provision and habitat availability: a case study in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 97
  start-page: 283
  year: 1997
  end-page: 291
  article-title: Brazilian Amazonian caboclo agriculture: effect of fallow period on maize yield
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 99
  start-page: 607
  year: 2018
  end-page: 620
  article-title: Associations among arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and seedlings are predicted to change with tree successional status
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 32
  start-page: 29
  year: 2018
  end-page: 39
  article-title: Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal spore communities of a tropical dry forest ecosystem show resilience to land‐use change
  publication-title: Fungal Ecology
– volume: 42
  start-page: 21
  year: 2010
  end-page: 30
  article-title: Untangling a decline in tropical forest resilience: constraints on the sustainability of shifting cultivation across the globe
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 145
  start-page: 225
  year: 2012b
  end-page: 233
  article-title: Recovery of woody plant diversity in tropical rain forests in southern China after logging and shifting cultivation
  publication-title: Biological Conservation
– volume: 99
  start-page: 89
  year: 2011
  end-page: 95
  article-title: Seed survival in soil: interacting effects of predation, dormancy and the soil microbial community
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 42
  start-page: 41
  year: 2010
  end-page: 48
  article-title: An untidy cover: invasion of bracken fern in the shifting cultivation systems of southern Yucatán, Mexico
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 9
  year: 2014
  article-title: Remnant trees affect species composition but not structure of tropical second‐growth forest
  publication-title: PLoS One
– volume: 11
  start-page: 2
  year: 2006
  article-title: Shorter fallow cycles affect the availability of noncrop plant resources in a shifting cultivation system
  publication-title: Ecology and Society
– volume: 58
  start-page: 61
  year: 1996
  end-page: 74
  article-title: Soil biological dynamics in slash‐and‐burn agriculture
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment
– volume: 12
  start-page: 1344
  year: 2002
  end-page: 1363
  article-title: Land use history, environment, and tree composition in a tropical forest
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 112
  start-page: 495
  year: 2013
  end-page: 510
  article-title: Nutrient stocks and phosphorus fractions in mountain soils of southern Ecuador after conversion of forest to pasture
  publication-title: Biogeochemistry
– volume: 17
  start-page: 419
  year: 2002
  end-page: 431
  article-title: Landscape dynamics and equilibrium in areas of slash‐and‐burn agriculture with short and long fallow period (Bragantina region, NE Brazilian Amazon)
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 3
  start-page: 928
  year: 2019
  end-page: 934
  article-title: Wet and dry tropical forests show opposite successional pathways in wood density but converge over time
  publication-title: Nature Ecology & Evolution
– volume: 34
  start-page: 1739
  year: 2002
  end-page: 1748
  article-title: Successional dynamics of soil characteristics in a long fallow agricultural system of the high tropical Andes
  publication-title: Soil Biology and Biochemistry
– volume: 9
  start-page: 387
  year: 1993
  end-page: 408
  article-title: Regeneration by sprouting in slash and burn rice cultivation, Taï rain forest, Côte D'ivoire
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 21
  start-page: 519
  year: 2005
  end-page: 527
  article-title: Resilience of secondary forest regrowth after slash‐and‐burn agriculture in Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Journal of Tropical Ecology
– volume: 5
  year: 2019
  article-title: Biodiversity recovery of Neotropical secondary forests
  publication-title: Science Advances
– volume: 7
  year: 2012
  article-title: Resilience in plant‐herbivore networks during secondary succession
  publication-title: PLoS One
– volume: 3
  start-page: 165
  year: 2010
  end-page: 174
  article-title: Liana regeneration in secondary and primary forests of Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Plant Ecology & Diversity
– volume: 48
  start-page: 290
  year: 2016b
  end-page: 300
  article-title: The effects of established trees on woody regeneration during secondary succession in tropical dry forests
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 30
  start-page: 223
  year: 1998
  end-page: 237
  article-title: Long‐term effects of forest regrowth and selective logging on the seed bank of tropical forests in NE Costa Rica
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 48
  start-page: 844
  year: 2016
  end-page: 855
  article-title: Natural regeneration and biodiversity: a global meta‐analysis and implications for spatial planning
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 21
  start-page: 3532
  year: 2015
  end-page: 3547
  article-title: Successional and seasonal variations in soil and litter microbial community structure and function during tropical post‐agricultural forest regeneration: a multiyear study
  publication-title: Global Change Biology
– volume: 381
  start-page: 209
  year: 2016
  end-page: 216
  article-title: Accelerating tropical forest restoration through the selective removal of pioneer species
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 3
  start-page: 365
  year: 2005
  end-page: 369
  article-title: Legacy of fire slows carbon accumulation in Amazonian forest regrowth
  publication-title: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
– volume: 132
  start-page: 26
  year: 2016
  end-page: 33
  article-title: Effects of past and present land use on vegetation cover and regeneration in a tropical dryland forest
  publication-title: Journal of Arid Environments
– volume: 31
  start-page: 340
  year: 2012
  end-page: 354
  article-title: The human ecology of regrowth in the tropics
  publication-title: Journal of Sustainable Forestry
– volume: 174
  start-page: 173
  year: 2014b
  end-page: 181
  article-title: Anthropogenic disturbance reduces seed‐dispersal services for myrmecochorous plants in the Brazilian Caatinga
  publication-title: Oecologia
– volume: 8
  start-page: 27
  year: 1982
  end-page: 37
  article-title: Decline of soil fertility due to intensification of land use by shifting agriculturists in Belize, Central America
  publication-title: Agro‐Ecosystems
– volume: 8
  start-page: 693
  year: 2013
  end-page: 727
  article-title: The impacts of shifting cultivation on tropical forest soil: a review
  publication-title: Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi. Ciências Humanas
– volume: 258
  start-page: 959
  year: 2009
  end-page: 970
  article-title: Diversity and structure of regenerating tropical dry forests in Costa Rica: geographic patterns and environmental drivers
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 18
  start-page: 231
  year: 2017
  end-page: 238
  article-title: Assisted natural regeneration accelerates recovery of highly disturbed rainforest
  publication-title: Ecological Management & Restoration
– volume: 135
  start-page: 148
  year: 2010
  end-page: 154
  article-title: Decreasing fallow duration in tropical slash‐and‐burn agriculture alters soil macroinvertebrate diversity: a case study in southern French Guiana
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
– volume: 12
  year: 2017
  article-title: A global review of past land use, climate, and active vs. passive restoration effects on forest recovery
  publication-title: PLoS One
– volume: 48
  start-page: 289
  year: 2011
  end-page: 306
  article-title: Maintaining the conservation value of shifting cultivation landscapes requires spatially explicit interventions
  publication-title: Environmental Management
– volume: 47
  start-page: 672
  year: 2015
  end-page: 680
  article-title: Rapid liana colonization along a secondary forest chronosequence
  publication-title: Biotropica
– volume: 2
  start-page: e1501639
  year: 2016
  end-page: e1501639
  article-title: Carbon sequestration potential of second‐growth forest regeneration in the Latin American tropics
  publication-title: Science Advances
– volume: 222
  start-page: 1112
  year: 2011
  end-page: 1128
  article-title: Simulating the potential for ecological restoration of dryland forests in Mexico under different disturbance regimes
  publication-title: Ecological Modelling
– volume: 75
  start-page: 377
  year: 1987
  end-page: 407
  article-title: Factors controlling succession following slash‐and‐burn agriculture in Amazonia
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– start-page: 367
  year: 2008
  end-page: 384
– volume: 430
  start-page: 312
  year: 2018
  end-page: 320
  article-title: Intensification of shifting cultivation reduces forest resilience in the northern Amazon
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 247
  start-page: 91
  year: 2007
  end-page: 97
  article-title: Litter fall and decomposition in primary, secondary and plantation forests in the Brazilian Amazon
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 22
  start-page: 595
  year: 2020
  end-page: 610
  article-title: Soil nematode communities as indicators of soil health in different land use types in tropical area
  publication-title: Nematology
– volume: 99
  start-page: 113
  year: 2011
  end-page: 121
  article-title: 150‐year legacy of land use on tree species composition in old‐secondary forests of Jamaica
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 48
  start-page: 573
  year: 2017
  end-page: 586
  article-title: Past land‐use and ecological resilience in a lowland Brazilian Atlantic Forest: implications for passive restoration
  publication-title: New Forests
– volume: 25
  start-page: 1099
  year: 2010
  end-page: 1111
  article-title: Patch dynamics and community metastability of a subtropical forest: compound effects of natural disturbance and human land use
  publication-title: Landscape Ecology
– volume: 45
  start-page: 371
  year: 2008
  end-page: 380
  article-title: Effects of pasture management on the natural regeneration of neotropical trees
  publication-title: Journal of Applied Ecology
– volume: 14
  start-page: 150
  year: 2004
  end-page: 163
  article-title: Nitrogen and phosphorus limitation of biomass growth in a tropical secondary forest
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 261
  start-page: 1042
  year: 2011
  end-page: 1052
  article-title: The effects of cultivation history on forest recovery in fallows in the eastern Arc Mountain, Tanzania
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 103
  start-page: 509
  year: 2004
  end-page: 518
  article-title: Forest fragmentation affects early successional patterns on shifting cultivation fields near Indian Church, Belize
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment
– volume: 77
  start-page: 11
  year: 2011
  end-page: 30
  article-title: Tropical vine growth and the effects on forest succession: a review of the ecology and management of tropical climbing plants
  publication-title: The Botanical Review
– volume: 115
  start-page: 91
  year: 1994
  end-page: 99
  article-title: The role of the shrub Cham. As a ‘succession facilitator’ in an abandoned pasture, Paragominas, Amazonia
  publication-title: Vegetatio
– volume: 9
  start-page: 915
  year: 1995
  end-page: 922
  article-title: Effects of recent land‐use practices on soil nutrients and succession under tropical wet forest in Costa Rica
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 176
  start-page: 27
  year: 1995
  end-page: 36
  article-title: Relationships between soil, fallow period, weeds and rice yield in slash‐and‐burn systems of Laos
  publication-title: Plant and Soil
– volume: 13
  start-page: 507
  year: 2005
  end-page: 514
  article-title: Restoration of Araucaria forest: the role of perches, pioneer vegetation, and soil fertility
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 20
  start-page: 1212
  year: 2006
  end-page: 1223
  article-title: Long‐term landscape change and bird abundance in Amazonian rainforest fragments
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 10
  year: 2015
  article-title: Functional trait strategies of trees in dry and wet tropical forests are similar but differ in their consequences for succession
  publication-title: PLoS One
– volume: 15
  start-page: 3035
  year: 2006
  end-page: 3043
  article-title: The invasion of and the impoverishment of the seed bank in fire prone areas of Brazilian Atlantic Forest
  publication-title: Biodiversity and Conservation
– volume: 48
  start-page: 643
  year: 2017
  end-page: 662
  article-title: Natural or assisted succession as approach of forest recovery on abandoned lands with different land use history in the Andes of southern Ecuador
  publication-title: New Forests
– volume: 17
  start-page: 223
  year: 2002
  end-page: 230
  article-title: The ecology of lianas and their role in forests
  publication-title: Trends in Ecology & Evolution
– volume: 19
  start-page: 47
  year: 2008
  end-page: 60
  article-title: High compatibility between arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities and seedlings of different land use types in a tropical dry ecosystem
  publication-title: Mycorrhiza
– volume: 119
  start-page: 257
  year: 2007
  end-page: 269
  article-title: Influence of slash‐and‐burn farming practices on fallow succession and land degradation in the rainforest region of Madagascar
  publication-title: Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
– volume: 47
  start-page: 112
  year: 2016
  end-page: 124
  article-title: Reconstructing land use history from Landsat time‐series: case study of a swidden agriculture system in Brazil
  publication-title: International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation
– volume: 80
  start-page: 1892
  year: 1999
  end-page: 1907
  article-title: Biomass, carbon, and nutrient dynamics of secondary forests in a humid tropical region of Mexico
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 14
  start-page: 1855
  year: 2004
  end-page: 1869
  article-title: Erosion of tree diversity during 200 years of shift cultivation in bornean rain forest
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 86
  start-page: 26
  year: 2005a
  end-page: 33
  article-title: Biomass accumulation after 10‐200 years of shifting cultivation in Bornean rain forest
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 4
  start-page: 67
  year: 2001
  end-page: 84
  article-title: Nitrogen oxide fluxes and nitrogen cycling during post‐agricultural succession and forest fertilization in the humid tropics
  publication-title: Ecosystems
– volume: 27
  start-page: 1104
  year: 2016a
  end-page: 1116
  article-title: Land use as a filter for species composition in Amazonian secondary forests
  publication-title: Journal of Vegetation Science
– volume: 31
  start-page: 169
  year: 2006
  end-page: 178
  article-title: Fertility of tropical soils under different land use systems—a case study of soils in Tabasco, Mexico
  publication-title: Applied Soil Ecology
– volume: 172
  start-page: 219
  year: 2013
  end-page: 229
  article-title: Interactions between repeated fire, nutrients, and insect herbivores affect the recovery of diversity in the southern Amazon
  publication-title: Oecologia
– volume: 37
  start-page: 361
  year: 2009
  end-page: 373
  article-title: Environmental consequences of the demise in swidden cultivation in montane mainland Southeast Asia: hydrology and geomorphology
  publication-title: Human Ecology
– volume: 68
  start-page: 257
  year: 2004
  end-page: 271
  article-title: Nutrient balance of shifting cultivation by burning or mulching in the eastern Amazon: evidence for subsoil nutrient accumulation
  publication-title: Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems
– volume: 26
  start-page: 1881
  year: 2016
  end-page: 1895
  article-title: Long‐lasting effects of land use history on soil fungal communities in second‐growth tropical rain forests
  publication-title: Ecological Applications
– volume: 56
  start-page: 2472
  year: 2019
  end-page: 2481
  article-title: Alternative functional trajectories along succession after different land uses in Central Amazonia
  publication-title: Journal of Applied Ecology
– volume: 104
  start-page: 116
  year: 2016
  end-page: 124
  article-title: Dominance of native earthworms in secondary tropical forests derived from slash‐and‐burn Mayan agricultural practices (Yucatán, Mexico)
  publication-title: Applied Soil Ecology
– volume: 86
  start-page: 902
  year: 1998
  end-page: 910
  article-title: Benefits of plant diversity to ecosystems: immediate, filter and founder effects
  publication-title: Journal of Ecology
– volume: 96
  start-page: 75
  year: 2008
  end-page: 84
  article-title: A fresh look at shifting cultivation: fallow length an uncertain indicator of productivity
  publication-title: Agricultural Systems
– volume: 408
  start-page: 349
  year: 2009
  end-page: 355
  article-title: Differentiation in the fertility of Inceptisols as related to land use in the upper Solimoes river region, western Amazon
  publication-title: The Science of the Total Environment
– volume: 21
  start-page: 101
  year: 1964
  end-page: 112
  article-title: Changes in the soil after clearing tropical forest
  publication-title: Plant and Soil
– volume: 99
  start-page: 207
  year: 2011
  end-page: 217
  article-title: Drivers of land abandonment in southern Chile and implications for landscape planning
  publication-title: Landscape and Urban Planning
– volume: 28
  start-page: 525
  year: 1996
  end-page: 536
  article-title: Land‐use dynamics in a post‐agricultural Puerto Rican landscape (1936‐1988)
  publication-title: Biotropica
– start-page: 45
  year: 2010
  end-page: 57
– volume: 13
  start-page: 204
  year: 2010
  end-page: 216
  article-title: Effects of different secondary vegetation types on bat community composition in Central Amazonia, Brazil
  publication-title: Animal Conservation
– volume: 107
  start-page: 433
  year: 2004
  end-page: 438
  article-title: Rethinking plant community theory
  publication-title: Oikos
– volume: 4
  start-page: 625
  year: 2001
  end-page: 645
  article-title: Effects of land‐use change on soil nutrient dynamics in Amazonia
  publication-title: Ecosystems
– volume: 98
  start-page: 1062
  year: 2017
  end-page: 1070
  article-title: Liana effects on biomass dynamics strengthen during secondary forest succession
  publication-title: Ecology
– volume: 33
  start-page: 260
  year: 2001
  end-page: 267
  article-title: The effect of distance from forest edge on seed rain and soil seed bank in a tropical pasture
  publication-title: Biotropica
– start-page: 59
  year: 2010
  end-page: 84
– volume: 23
  start-page: 1386
  year: 2009
  end-page: 1395
  article-title: A contemporary assessment of change in humid tropical forests
  publication-title: Conservation Biology
– volume: 46
  start-page: 219
  year: 2005
  end-page: 228
  article-title: Soil seed banks in tropical agricultural fields at Los Tuxtlas, Mexico
  publication-title: Tropical Ecology
– volume: 18
  start-page: 50
  year: 2010
  end-page: 58
  article-title: Influence of post‐clearing treatment on the recovery of herbaceous plant communities in amazonian secondary forests
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 47
  start-page: 163
  year: 1999
  end-page: 196
  article-title: Ecosystem fertility and fallow function in the humid and subhumid tropics
  publication-title: Agroforestry Systems
– volume: 8
  start-page: 339
  year: 2000
  end-page: 349
  article-title: Tropical montane forest restoration in Costa Rica: overcoming barriers to dispersal and establishment
  publication-title: Restoration Ecology
– volume: 267
  start-page: 253
  year: 2012
  end-page: 261
  article-title: Subtropical dry forest regeneration in grass‐invaded areas of Puerto Rico: understanding why dominates and native species fail
  publication-title: Forest Ecology and Management
– volume: 16
  start-page: 45
  year: 2001
  end-page: 51
  article-title: Ecology of sprouting in woody plants: the persistence niche
  publication-title: Trends in Ecology & Evolution
– volume: 14
  start-page: 195
  year: 2003
  end-page: 204
  article-title: Species composition and invasion in NW Argentinian secondary forests: effects of land use history, environment and landscape
  publication-title: Journal of Vegetation Science
– ident: e_1_2_8_213_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467402002171
– ident: e_1_2_8_227_1
  doi: 10.1111/conl.12607
– ident: e_1_2_8_135_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(00)00466-7
– ident: e_1_2_8_206_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.1999.tb00136.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_302_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00154.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_138_1
  doi: 10.1007/s12231-010-9138-8
– ident: e_1_2_8_245_1
  doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083284
– ident: e_1_2_8_199_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2018.11.021
– ident: e_1_2_8_69_1
  doi: 10.1016/0167-8809(95)00590-O
– ident: e_1_2_8_41_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12384
– ident: e_1_2_8_75_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2011.11.009
– ident: e_1_2_8_194_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2010.12.026
– ident: e_1_2_8_190_1
  doi: 10.1590/1809-4392200331052
– ident: e_1_2_8_14_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01333.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_258_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(97)00070-4
– ident: e_1_2_8_293_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2010.01641.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_299_1
  doi: 10.1080/17550874.2012.735714
– ident: e_1_2_8_70_1
  doi: 10.1111/oik.03229
– ident: e_1_2_8_241_1
  doi: 10.1111/0033-0124.00233
– ident: e_1_2_8_271_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2016.09.020
– ident: e_1_2_8_121_1
  doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.12608
– ident: e_1_2_8_11_1
  doi: 10.1016/0304-3746(82)90012-9
– ident: e_1_2_8_183_1
  doi: 10.1111/nph.13734
– ident: e_1_2_8_13_1
  doi: 10.1111/brv.12231
– ident: e_1_2_8_287_1
  doi: 10.1007/s11258-007-9327-4
– ident: e_1_2_8_142_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2004.07.001
– ident: e_1_2_8_217_1
  doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.12843
– ident: e_1_2_8_51_1
  doi: 10.1088/1748-9326/ab79e6
– ident: e_1_2_8_92_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2015.12.005
– ident: e_1_2_8_145_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10531-009-9714-3
– ident: e_1_2_8_211_1
  doi: 10.1007/s12229-010-9059-3
– ident: e_1_2_8_179_1
  doi: 10.1007/s00442-012-2482-x
– ident: e_1_2_8_300_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2011.12.015
– ident: e_1_2_8_189_1
– ident: e_1_2_8_7_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2005.00041.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_62_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2001.tb00177.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_177_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2011.08.013
– ident: e_1_2_8_104_1
  doi: 10.1111/jvs.12376
– ident: e_1_2_8_57_1
  doi: 10.1111/conl.12709
– ident: e_1_2_8_178_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12382
– ident: e_1_2_8_100_1
  doi: 10.1038/s41559-018-0559-6
– ident: e_1_2_8_8_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF00329755
– ident: e_1_2_8_33_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2005.09.012
– ident: e_1_2_8_236_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2009.08.012
– volume: 80
  start-page: 1892
  year: 1999
  ident: e_1_2_8_129_1
  article-title: Biomass, carbon, and nutrient dynamics of secondary forests in a humid tropical region of Mexico
  publication-title: Ecology
– ident: e_1_2_8_295_1
  doi: 10.14358/PERS.74.6.725
– ident: e_1_2_8_197_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2006.00344.x
– start-page: 185
  volume-title: Life Forms and Dynamics in Tropical Forests
  year: 2001
  ident: e_1_2_8_22_1
– ident: e_1_2_8_72_1
  doi: 10.1111/gcb.13314
– ident: e_1_2_8_73_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2010.11.005
– ident: e_1_2_8_286_1
  doi: 10.3390/f5071737
– ident: e_1_2_8_270_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12181
– ident: e_1_2_8_98_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF00993001
– ident: e_1_2_8_290_1
  doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0053009
– ident: e_1_2_8_250_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2009.00569.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_153_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12386
– start-page: 45
  volume-title: Reforesting Landscapes: Linking Pattern and Process
  year: 2010
  ident: e_1_2_8_238_1
– ident: e_1_2_8_37_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2010.12.019
– ident: e_1_2_8_53_1
  doi: 10.2307/1942495
– ident: e_1_2_8_155_1
  doi: 10.1890/03-5321
– ident: e_1_2_8_175_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1009879505765
– ident: e_1_2_8_218_1
  doi: 10.1038/nature16512
– ident: e_1_2_8_257_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10531-005-4877-z
– ident: e_1_2_8_289_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2018.08.014
– ident: e_1_2_8_267_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2006.00427.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_19_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12259
– ident: e_1_2_8_94_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2006.tb02442.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_141_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2013.04.024
– ident: e_1_2_8_60_1
  doi: 10.1111/conl.12768
– ident: e_1_2_8_229_1
  doi: 10.1590/S1981-81222013000300013
– ident: e_1_2_8_228_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2010.00715.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_16_1
  doi: 10.1002/ecy.2122
– ident: e_1_2_8_31_1
  doi: 10.2307/1938810
– ident: e_1_2_8_176_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2664.2003.00819.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_191_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10021-017-0168-2
– ident: e_1_2_8_268_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12393
– ident: e_1_2_8_131_1
  doi: 10.1111/jvs.12457
– ident: e_1_2_8_205_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF01373877
– ident: e_1_2_8_84_1
  doi: 10.1007/s100210000060
– ident: e_1_2_8_101_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2005.02.012
– ident: e_1_2_8_216_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF00038691
– ident: e_1_2_8_79_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2008.03.021
– ident: e_1_2_8_235_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2011.00779.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_249_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10745-008-9207-0
– ident: e_1_2_8_307_1
  doi: 10.1111/geb.12663
– ident: e_1_2_8_76_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117822
– ident: e_1_2_8_296_1
  doi: 10.1177/194008291100400308
– ident: e_1_2_8_87_1
  doi: 10.1590/2179-8087.069017
– ident: e_1_2_8_148_1
  doi: 10.1079/9780851999142.0073
– ident: e_1_2_8_42_1
  doi: 10.1007/s00442-004-1788-8
– ident: e_1_2_8_30_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467400003989
– ident: e_1_2_8_91_1
  doi: 10.1080/14728028.2019.1579673
– ident: e_1_2_8_108_1
  doi: 10.3390/f5123022
– ident: e_1_2_8_117_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2007.00863.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_35_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2020.118398
– ident: e_1_2_8_15_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2010.11.021
– ident: e_1_2_8_143_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(03)00109-9
– ident: e_1_2_8_260_1
  doi: 10.1890/0012-9658(2001)082[2547:HTSDAR]2.0.CO;2
– ident: e_1_2_8_212_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2013.03.025
– ident: e_1_2_8_185_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agsy.2007.06.002
– ident: e_1_2_8_38_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(00)00361-3
– ident: e_1_2_8_115_1
  doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.12623
– ident: e_1_2_8_248_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10113-010-0128-2
– volume-title: People in Motion, Forests in Transition: Trends in Migration, Urbanization, and Remittances and their Effects on Tropical Forests (Vol. 142)
  year: 2015
  ident: e_1_2_8_118_1
– ident: e_1_2_8_284_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0367-2530(17)30816-2
– ident: e_1_2_8_78_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.1998.tb00057.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_198_1
  doi: 10.2307/3545745
– ident: e_1_2_8_233_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1365-3180.1996.d01-6.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_200_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF00121013
– ident: e_1_2_8_17_1
  doi: 10.1890/15-1397.1
– ident: e_1_2_8_252_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2007.00274.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_125_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1526-100x.2000.80049.x
– volume: 14
  start-page: 903
  year: 2012
  ident: e_1_2_8_150_1
  article-title: Abundance and diversity of AM fungi across a gradient of land use intensity and their seasonal variations in Niligiri biosphere of the Western Ghats, India
  publication-title: Journal of Agricultural Science and Technology
– ident: e_1_2_8_20_1
  doi: 10.1038/nature12525
– ident: e_1_2_8_180_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12536
– ident: e_1_2_8_255_1
  doi: 10.1890/09-0636.1
– ident: e_1_2_8_164_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.ppees.2010.09.002
– ident: e_1_2_8_103_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2011.00773.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_136_1
  doi: 10.2307/3544208
– ident: e_1_2_8_298_1
  doi: 10.1007/s11056-010-9242-8
– ident: e_1_2_8_137_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10531-010-9813-1
– ident: e_1_2_8_311_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2010.07.013
– ident: e_1_2_8_39_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.funeco.2017.11.006
– ident: e_1_2_8_10_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2003.tb02144.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_170_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.0030-1299.2004.13250.x
– start-page: 119
  volume-title: The Status of Puerto Rico's Forests, 2003. Resource Bulletin SRS‐119
  year: 2007
  ident: e_1_2_8_29_1
  doi: 10.2737/SRS-RB-119
– ident: e_1_2_8_45_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2010.01742.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_71_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12287
– ident: e_1_2_8_81_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2001.tb00214.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_59_1
  doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1701345
– ident: e_1_2_8_272_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1006215430432
– ident: e_1_2_8_182_1
  doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0171368
– ident: e_1_2_8_154_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(98)00494-0
– ident: e_1_2_8_90_1
  doi: 10.1016/0169-5347(96)81090-1
– ident: e_1_2_8_109_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1009726421352
– volume: 64
  start-page: 16
  year: 2015
  ident: e_1_2_8_140_1
  article-title: Species richness of termites (Blattoidea: Termitoidae) and ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) along disturbance gradients in semi‐arid Burkina Faso (West Africa)
  publication-title: Bonn Zoological Bulletin
– ident: e_1_2_8_174_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2013.03.046
– ident: e_1_2_8_208_1
  doi: 10.1007/s11056-017-9590-8
– ident: e_1_2_8_149_1
  doi: 10.1002/ecy.1734
– ident: e_1_2_8_308_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10745-009-9258-x
– ident: e_1_2_8_231_1
  doi: 10.1007/s00267-010-9611-2
– ident: e_1_2_8_196_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1023262109867
– ident: e_1_2_8_220_1
  doi: 10.1055/s-2004-821269
– ident: e_1_2_8_201_1
  doi: 10.1073/pnas.1500403112
– ident: e_1_2_8_46_1
  doi: 10.1038/17946
– ident: e_1_2_8_89_1
  doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.13484
– ident: e_1_2_8_151_1
  doi: 10.4324/9780203071649
– ident: e_1_2_8_225_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2009.06.023
– ident: e_1_2_8_26_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1469-1795.2009.00322.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_44_1
  doi: 10.1002/eap.1653
– ident: e_1_2_8_50_1
  doi: 10.1098/rstb.2006.1990
– ident: e_1_2_8_5_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2012.00908.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_34_1
  doi: 10.2307/2260567
– ident: e_1_2_8_52_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(01)00693-4
– ident: e_1_2_8_239_1
  doi: 10.1080/10549811.2011.588457
– ident: e_1_2_8_126_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF01985718
– ident: e_1_2_8_139_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467400010038
– ident: e_1_2_8_273_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2004.07.031
– ident: e_1_2_8_263_1
  doi: 10.1023/B:FRES.0000019470.93637.54
– ident: e_1_2_8_221_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2008.10.036
– ident: e_1_2_8_219_1
  doi: 10.1038/s41559-019-0882-6
– ident: e_1_2_8_224_1
  doi: 10.1505/146554815815834796
– ident: e_1_2_8_4_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.1994.tb00054.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_36_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.catena.2018.02.018
– ident: e_1_2_8_192_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(99)00337-0
– ident: e_1_2_8_106_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2010.08.027
– ident: e_1_2_8_281_1
  doi: 10.2307/1939128
– ident: e_1_2_8_68_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467400007471
– ident: e_1_2_8_181_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10021-001-0033-0
– ident: e_1_2_8_234_1
  doi: 10.1080/17550874.2010.484555
– ident: e_1_2_8_292_1
  doi: 10.2307/3565409
– ident: e_1_2_8_276_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1526-100X.1999.72022.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_99_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467405002543
– ident: e_1_2_8_95_1
  doi: 10.1163/15685411-00003325
– ident: e_1_2_8_110_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(00)00535-1
– ident: e_1_2_8_254_1
  doi: 10.1088/1748-9326/aa708b
– ident: e_1_2_8_306_1
  doi: 10.1111/avsc.12161
– ident: e_1_2_8_67_1
  doi: 10.1890/01-6006
– ident: e_1_2_8_240_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01332.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_169_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agsy.2005.11.001
– ident: e_1_2_8_259_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10980-015-0267-4
– ident: e_1_2_8_12_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2004.07.002
– ident: e_1_2_8_119_1
  doi: 10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.37.091305.110246
– ident: e_1_2_8_111_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.1995.tb00092.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_80_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.jag.2015.11.018
– ident: e_1_2_8_269_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2006.07.012
– ident: e_1_2_8_277_1
  doi: 10.1890/10-0097.1
– ident: e_1_2_8_146_1
  doi: 10.1016/0167-8809(94)00531-I
– ident: e_1_2_8_301_1
  doi: 10.1002/eap.1462
– ident: e_1_2_8_159_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1007985915187
– ident: e_1_2_8_88_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1523-1739.1995.09040915.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_279_1
  doi: 10.2307/2260425
– ident: e_1_2_8_171_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02653.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_107_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2007.00342.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_232_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF00017672
– ident: e_1_2_8_18_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2007.04.017
– ident: e_1_2_8_123_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1526-100X.1998.00638.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_47_1
  doi: 10.7208/chicago/9780226118109.001.0001
– ident: e_1_2_8_105_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2745.1998.00306.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_96_1
  doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-440405-2.50014-2
– ident: e_1_2_8_210_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1461-0248.2003.00440.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_160_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2009.00599.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_251_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0169-5347(02)02491-6
– ident: e_1_2_8_184_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1020507631848
– ident: e_1_2_8_65_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2010.01739.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_63_1
  doi: 10.5751/ES-01707-110202
– ident: e_1_2_8_165_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467411000253
– ident: e_1_2_8_283_1
  doi: 10.1007/s11258-011-0003-3
– ident: e_1_2_8_56_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10980-009-9338-8
– ident: e_1_2_8_187_1
  doi: 10.1093/biosci/biv108
– ident: e_1_2_8_244_1
  doi: 10.3389/ffgc.2020.560912
– ident: e_1_2_8_195_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01373.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_166_1
  doi: 10.1002/ecy.1499
– ident: e_1_2_8_242_1
  doi: 10.1029/2011JG001841
– ident: e_1_2_8_61_1
  doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.13501
– ident: e_1_2_8_230_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1009825211430
– ident: e_1_2_8_6_1
  doi: 10.1126/science.1103179
– ident: e_1_2_8_237_1
  doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aau3114
– ident: e_1_2_8_294_1
  doi: 10.1177/194008291500800402
– ident: e_1_2_8_247_1
  doi: 10.1007/s11056-017-9586-4
– ident: e_1_2_8_209_1
  doi: 10.1126/science.1201609
– ident: e_1_2_8_305_1
  doi: 10.1890/1540-9295(2005)003[0365:LOFSCA]2.0.CO;2
– ident: e_1_2_8_49_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12381
– ident: e_1_2_8_116_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10533-012-9742-z
– ident: e_1_2_8_186_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2745.2001.00583.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_132_1
  doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181092
– ident: e_1_2_8_202_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2010.18335.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_21_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467405002439
– ident: e_1_2_8_124_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2010.07.004
– ident: e_1_2_8_264_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2017.03.020
– ident: e_1_2_8_310_1
  doi: 10.1007/s10980-010-9486-x
– volume: 113
  year: 2008
  ident: e_1_2_8_120_1
  article-title: Factors influencing spatial pattern in tropical forest clearance and stand age: Implications for carbon storage and species diversity
  publication-title: Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
  doi: 10.1029/2007JG000568
– ident: e_1_2_8_274_1
  doi: 10.2307/2389094
– ident: e_1_2_8_280_1
  doi: 10.2307/2259689
– ident: e_1_2_8_82_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.cosust.2013.07.010
– ident: e_1_2_8_83_1
  doi: 10.1007/s004420100801
– ident: e_1_2_8_130_1
  doi: 10.1080/17550874.2012.716088
– ident: e_1_2_8_288_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF00044863
– ident: e_1_2_8_23_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2012.09.016
– ident: e_1_2_8_275_1
  doi: 10.1890/1051-0761(2002)012[1344:LUHEAT]2.0.CO;2
– ident: e_1_2_8_282_1
  doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0082433
– ident: e_1_2_8_278_1
  doi: 10.1111/emr.12277
– ident: e_1_2_8_54_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00159.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_74_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2011.19992.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_203_1
  doi: 10.1007/s00267-014-0431-7
– ident: e_1_2_8_207_1
  doi: 10.1016/0167-8809(95)00653-2
– ident: e_1_2_8_85_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2007.01411.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_193_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2009.09.007
– ident: e_1_2_8_134_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2015.11.013
– start-page: 59
  volume-title: Reforesting Landscapes: Linking Pattern and Process
  year: 2010
  ident: e_1_2_8_214_1
– ident: e_1_2_8_28_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1012672005360
– ident: e_1_2_8_102_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.gca.2010.11.029
– volume: 36
  start-page: 99
  year: 2004
  ident: e_1_2_8_112_1
  article-title: Rain forest regeneration beneath the canopy of fig trees isolated in pastures of Los Tuxtlas, Mexico
  publication-title: Biotropica
– ident: e_1_2_8_304_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2005.00063.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_97_1
  doi: 10.1007/s00572-008-0203-4
– ident: e_1_2_8_77_1
  doi: 10.1890/1051-0761(1999)009[0998:SDAPFS]2.0.CO;2
– ident: e_1_2_8_32_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467404002007
– ident: e_1_2_8_157_1
  doi: 10.1890/04-0841
– ident: e_1_2_8_261_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.05.030
– ident: e_1_2_8_253_1
  doi: 10.3389/ffgc.2020.00085
– ident: e_1_2_8_40_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1024120600816
– ident: e_1_2_8_285_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2006.00100.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_152_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117499
– ident: e_1_2_8_156_1
  doi: 10.1890/03-0564
– ident: e_1_2_8_86_1
  doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.13263
– ident: e_1_2_8_93_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1442-9993.2007.01766.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_265_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2009.09.030
– ident: e_1_2_8_309_1
  doi: 10.1016/0378-1127(95)03575-U
– ident: e_1_2_8_161_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12126
– ident: e_1_2_8_158_1
  doi: 10.1073/pnas.0705005104
– ident: e_1_2_8_303_1
  doi: 10.5751/ES-04275-160315
– ident: e_1_2_8_222_1
  doi: 10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110316-022944
– start-page: 367
  volume-title: Tropical Forest Community Ecology
  year: 2008
  ident: e_1_2_8_215_1
– ident: e_1_2_8_291_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.foreco.2008.10.031
– ident: e_1_2_8_188_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1021250306481
– ident: e_1_2_8_297_1
  doi: 10.1046/j.1526-100x.2000.80056.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_162_1
  doi: 10.1007/s00442-013-2740-6
– ident: e_1_2_8_256_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467409005823
– ident: e_1_2_8_204_1
  doi: 10.1088/1748-9326/ab76db
– ident: e_1_2_8_223_1
  doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.12351
– ident: e_1_2_8_9_1
  doi: 10.2307/2261011
– ident: e_1_2_8_163_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12230
– ident: e_1_2_8_147_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.agee.2003.11.011
– ident: e_1_2_8_122_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467417000049
– ident: e_1_2_8_133_1
  doi: 10.1111/1365-2745.12298
– ident: e_1_2_8_24_1
  doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00167.x
– ident: e_1_2_8_128_1
  doi: 10.1146/annurev.es.13.110182.001221
– ident: e_1_2_8_173_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2016.04.006
– ident: e_1_2_8_172_1
  doi: 10.1023/A:1020365507324
– ident: e_1_2_8_243_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.pedobi.2003.12.006
– ident: e_1_2_8_58_1
  doi: 10.1038/ncomms11666
– ident: e_1_2_8_167_1
  doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0123741
– ident: e_1_2_8_64_1
  doi: 10.2307/3237285
– start-page: 227
  volume-title: Reforesting Landscapes: Linking Pattern and Process
  year: 2010
  ident: e_1_2_8_66_1
– ident: e_1_2_8_127_1
  doi: 10.1890/03-0655
– volume: 46
  start-page: 219
  year: 2005
  ident: e_1_2_8_113_1
  article-title: Soil seed banks in tropical agricultural fields at Los Tuxtlas, Mexico
  publication-title: Tropical Ecology
– ident: e_1_2_8_25_1
  doi: 10.1186/s13717-017-0101-9
– ident: e_1_2_8_55_1
  doi: 10.1890/09-1350.1
– ident: e_1_2_8_43_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2016.07.031
– ident: e_1_2_8_48_1
  doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1501639
– ident: e_1_2_8_168_1
  doi: 10.1111/btp.12143
– ident: e_1_2_8_262_1
  doi: 10.1111/gcb.12947
– ident: e_1_2_8_226_1
  doi: 10.1007/BF02377111
– ident: e_1_2_8_114_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0378-1127(99)00055-9
– ident: e_1_2_8_27_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0169-5347(00)02033-4
– ident: e_1_2_8_144_1
  doi: 10.2307/2388198
– ident: e_1_2_8_266_1
  doi: 10.1017/S0266467400001656
– ident: e_1_2_8_246_1
  doi: 10.1016/j.pecon.2019.12.004
– ident: e_1_2_8_3_1
  doi: 10.1016/S0038-0717(02)00161-X
SSID ssj0014663
Score 2.6204247
SecondaryResourceType review_article
Snippet ABSTRACT Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human‐modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary...
Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human‐modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across...
Secondary forests are increasingly important components of human-modified landscapes in the tropics. Successional pathways, however, can vary enormously across...
SourceID pubmedcentral
proquest
pubmed
crossref
wiley
SourceType Open Access Repository
Aggregation Database
Index Database
Enrichment Source
Publisher
StartPage 1114
SubjectTerms Composition
Divergence
ecological filter
Ecological function
Ecological succession
ecosystem functioning
Ecosystems
Environmental restoration
forest restoration
Forests
Frequency dependence
Herbivory
human‐modified landscapes
Introduced species
Invasive species
Land use
Landscape
Literature reviews
Management
Microbiota
natural regeneration
Original
Pasture
Predation
Propagules
Regeneration
Regrowth
resilience
Restoration strategies
secondary succession
Seed predation
Shifting cultivation
Soil conditions
Species composition
Tropical environments
Tropical forests
Vegetation
Title The role of land‐use history in driving successional pathways and its implications for the restoration of tropical forests
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fbrv.12694
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33709566
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2572539908
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2501258580
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC8360101
Volume 96
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV1LS8QwEB58IHgR39YXUTx4qWzT9IUnn4igiKh4K0mbYkG6su0qCx78Cf5Gf4kzabfsooKX3WUzTbc7meSbZOYbgD0nk77U6KmGgU5s4piyQ1zobS4yPwoyHglzFHN17V_ci8tH73ECDoe5MDU_RLvhRpZh5msycKnKESNXvdcDh_IwJ2GaUmupfAEXN-0RgvBNGTV8FzYOQqehFaIwnvbS8cXoB8L8GSg5CmDNCnQ-D3MNdGRHta4XYEIXizBTF5McLME7apxRsCDrZoziFb8-PvulZjWj8IDlBUt7Oe0fsLJvyiSaXUBGNYnf5KBkeAnLq5LlI0HmDDEtq6hjU4HGfEn9V73uC6mX2rGlXIb787O7kwu7qa1gJ0SZZyvZ8cJU8ijRmRdoCoDRmhJpRabQq5EIhbQnM09HKUKUkIClSHQkg5BqwoSOuwJTRbfQa8CSNM28CJd5ha6XcpRCEKXSBHt2BU-4a8H-8E-Ok4Z4nOpfPMdDBwT1ERt9WLDbir7UbBu_CW0ONRU3BlfGOPNwItnthBbstM1oKnT-IQvd7ZMMPiC6R2HHgtVase1dXDcgSkbfgmBM5a0A0XCPtxT5k6HjpjQYnNjwMc3g-PuHx8e3D-bD-v9FN2CWUxSNCTnchKmq19dbCIMqtW2GO76e3vJvFMAHZA
linkProvider Wiley-Blackwell
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV1LS-RAEC5GF3Ev4vra-Fhb8eAlMkk6L_CissP4RETFW-hOOhiQzDDJKAN72J_gb_SXWNXJhBlU8JSQrnQe1dX9VXf1VwB7Vio8odBTDXwVm8QxZQY40Js2T73QT-2Q66WYyyuve8fPHtyHFhyO98JU_BDNhBtZhu6vycBpQnrCyuXg-cCijZgz8IMjLqc2bfPrZg2BezqPGh65ia3QqnmFKI6nuXV6NPoAMT9GSk4iWD0EdRZhocaO7KhS9i9oqXwJ5qpskqNl-IcqZxQtyHopo4DFt_-vw0KxilJ4xLKcJYOMJhBYMdR5EvU0IKOkxC9iVDC8hWVlwbKJKHOGoJaVVLFOQaMvUv3loNcn_VI5lhQrcNf5e3vSNevkCmZMnHmmFG03SIQdxip1fUURMErRTlqeSnRrBGIh5YrUVWGCGCUgZMljFQo_oKQwgeWswmzey9VvYHGSpG6I47xE30taUiKKkkmMNTvcjm3HgP3xT47imnmcEmA8RWMPBPURaX0YsNuI9iu6jc-ENseaimqLKyLsemxi2W0HBuw0xWgrtAAictUbkgx-IPpHQduAtUqxzVMcxydORs8Af0rljQDxcE-X5Nmj5uOmfTDYs-Fn6sbx9YtHxzf3-mT9-6LbMN-9vbyILk6vzjfgp00hNTr-cBNmy8FQbSEmKuUf3fTfASc4CfA
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV1La9tAEB7clJZeSvpW4zTbkkMvKpa0epFTHjVOkxpT4uKb2JV2qaDIxpJbDDn0J-Q35pdkZiULG6eQk4R2tHrMzu7M7rffABw6WgRCYaQahSq1iWPKjnCgt12ugzjUbszNUsz3YTAY828Tf9KBo9VemJofop1wI8sw_TUZ-CzTa0Yu53--OLQP8xE8psU-wvO5fNQuIfDApFHDI7exEToNrRDBeNpbNwejLQ9zGyi57sCaEai_C88b15Ed17p-AR1VvIQndTLJ5Su4Ro0zAguyqWaEV7z9d7MoFasZhZcsL1g2z2n-gJULkybRzAIyykn8VyxLhrewvCpZvgYyZ-jTsooqNhlozEWqv5pPZ6ReKseS8jWM-1-vTgd2k1vBTokyz5ai50eZcONUaT9UBIBRijbSci0xqhHoCilfaF_FGf7biBxLnqpYhBHlhIkc7w3sFNNCvQOWZpn2YxzmJYZe0pESnSiZpVizx93U9Sz4vPrJSdoQj1P-i9_JKgBBfSRGHxZ8akVnNdvGfULdlaaSxuDKBHsel0h2e5EFH9tiNBVa_xCFmi5IBj8Qw6OoZ8HbWrHtUzwvJErGwIJwQ-WtANFwb5YU-S9Dx03bYLBjw880jeP_L56c_PhpTt4_XPQAno7O-snl-fBiD565BKgx6MMu7FTzhdpHj6iSH0zLvwN9qAkZ
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=The+role+of+land-use+history+in+driving+successional+pathways+and+its+implications+for+the+restoration+of+tropical+forests&rft.jtitle=Biological+reviews+of+the+Cambridge+Philosophical+Society&rft.au=Jakovac%2C+Catarina+C&rft.au=Junqueira%2C+Andr%C3%A9+B&rft.au=Crouzeilles%2C+Renato&rft.au=Pe%C3%B1a-Claros%2C+Marielos&rft.date=2021-08-01&rft.issn=1469-185X&rft.eissn=1469-185X&rft.volume=96&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=1114&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fbrv.12694&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1464-7931&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1464-7931&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1464-7931&client=summon