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Research Article

Conservation status assessment of the highest forests in the world: Polylepis flavipila forests as a case study

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Pages 160-169 | Received 24 Jul 2020, Accepted 13 Apr 2021, Published online: 17 May 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Polylepis forests are one of the most threatened high Andean ecosystems, with 15 species and eight subspecies being categorized as critically endangered, vulnerable or near threatened by IUCN. However, their conservation status is poorly evaluated and could be outdated. As a case study, we evaluated Polylepis flavipila, a species endemic to the Peruvian central Andes, that is categorized as Vulnerable in Peru and is not mentioned in the Global Threatened Species Red List. We used two methods to categorize P. flavipila: (1) a species-level assessment using criteria proposed by IUCN and (2) a population-level assessment of four forests using the more specific criteria proposed by Navarro and collaborators. We recorded 350 relicts of P. flavipila forests as identified from herbariums and other sources. Forest cover was reduced 53% over 45 years as evaluated using satellite images from 1975 and 2020 and we estimated a total area of 458 and 216 km2, respectively. Thus, according to the IUCN criteria, P. flavipila should be classified as Endangered. At the population level, the application of the criteria of Navarro and collaborators results in different threat categories: one of the studied forests is classified as Critically Endangered, two forests as Vulnerable and one as Least Concern. We stress the need for updated categorizations for the 45 described Polylepis tree and shrub species based on the following facts: the only species we tested should change category, the IUCN categorizations were performed 16 to 22 years ago, and there have been many changes in the taxonomy of the genus. The assessment using IUCN criteria should also be complemented with more detailed evaluations at the population level since important differences were detected at a smaller scale, which could help target conservation and restoration resources more efficiently.

Acknowledgments

We thank the “Servicio Nacional Forestal y de Fauna Silvestre” and the “Servicio Nacional de Áreas Naturales Protegidas por el Estado” for providing authorizations for research under R.D.G. No. 037-2017-SERFOR/DGGSPFFS and R.D. 009-2018-SERNANP-DGANP, respectively. Likewise, we are grateful to Wendy Carolay Navarro Romo, Ciro Ricardo Paredes Huamán (Negrito) and Jimy Ronie Llacuachaqui Rodríguez (Timys) for contributing to field work and making it so much fun.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Author contribution

FNAM and HRQM conceived and designed the research, gathered information and analyzed the data; FNAM, HRQM, and DR wrote, revised, and edited the manuscript.

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by Consejo Nacional de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación Tecnológica-CONCYTEC, under Grant 382-2019-FONDECYT-DE; Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico, Tecnológico y de Innovación Tecnológica [382-2019-FONDECYT];