The species rich tropical rainforests have been under intense pressure to satisfy demands for timber and
non-timber products, the long term effect being degradation in terms of quality and quantity of the forest ecosystem.
Tree species diversity and soil properties were investigated for a primary (Queen’s) and two degraded (Elephant and
Oluwa) tropical rainforests in Nigeria. Queen’s forest has not been logged within living memory while Oluwa and
Elephant forests were last logged in early 1970s and 1990s, respectively. Differences in soil physical and chemical
properties of the three sites could not be attributed to the effect of forest degradation since there was no discernable
pattern in soil properties of primary and degraded forests. A total of 31 families were encountered in all three sites
(26, 24 and 22 in Queen’s, Oluwa and Elephant forests, respectively). Queen’s forest had the highest number of tree
species (51), followed by Oluwa (45) and lastly by Elephant forest (31). About one third of all tree species identified
in Queen’s, Oluwa and Elephant forests were among the endangered tree species in Nigeria, a situation that calls
urgent conservation measures. Species diversity index, species richness and species evenness followed the order:
Queen’s forest > Oluwa > Elephant forest, indicating that species diversity, species richness and species evenness in
the three sites depended on the state of the forest, with diversity decreasing as the level of forest degradation
increases. The similarity of species diversity of the once highly degraded Oluwa forest to that of Queen’s forest
shows that lowland tropical rainforests have the ability of returning to their original “species rich” situation even
after significant degradation, , provided the forest is left undisturbed for a considerable period of time.
«
The species rich tropical rainforests have been under intense pressure to satisfy demands for timber and
non-timber products, the long term effect being degradation in terms of quality and quantity of the forest ecosystem.
Tree species diversity and soil properties were investigated for a primary (Queen’s) and two degraded (Elephant and
Oluwa) tropical rainforests in Nigeria. Queen’s forest has not been logged within living memory while Oluwa and
Elephant forests were last logged in early 19...
»