Forest fragmentation in the Himalaya: A Central Himalayan case study

Type Working Paper - The International Journal of Sustainable Development & World Ecology
Title Forest fragmentation in the Himalaya: A Central Himalayan case study
Author(s)
Volume 14
Issue 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2007
Page numbers 201-210
URL http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13504500709469720#.VdnyuPntmko
Abstract
Administrative divisions in the Great Southern Watershed of the Himalaya are diverse in terms of population density and forest cover. This study analyzed the spatial patterns of different attributes in the different Indian states and Himalayan kingdoms, and explored the extent and patterns of forest fragmentation in a Himalayan landscape as a case study. Of the total landscape in the case study area (3167 km2), 41% was fragmented. Homogenous landscape (59%) includes either continuous natural vegetation or a village landscape. Presence of two forest patches (38% of the total fragmented area) at a unit scale of about 0.5 km2 (525 × 525 m) was the most commonly occurring pattern but, in some parts, up to 13 patches were observed. Fragmentation of vegetation was visible even at smaller scales of landscape analysis. At a scale of 75 × 75 m, land division into three patches was observed. With an increase in the unit area of landscape analysis the number of patches per unit land area and the total fragmented area also increased. The forests that escaped fragmentation were either inaccessible to humans or had rigorous legal protection. Anthropogenic activities appeared to be one of the factors responsible for fragmentation but, natural factors also contributed.

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