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Logging and conversion of tropical forests to oil palm plantations have wide effects on ecosystems, study shows

Don't write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems
A researcher measures a small mammal. Credit: Ed Turner

A research team led by the University of Oxford has carried out the most comprehensive assessment to date of how logging and conversion to oil palm plantations affect tropical forest ecosystems. The results demonstrate that logging and conversion have significantly different and cumulative environmental impacts. The results were 10 January in Science.

Understanding how different aspects of tropical forests are affected by logging and to oil palm plantations is important for identifying priority habitats for conservation and restoration.

It can also help aid decisions on land use—for instance, whether a logged forest should be protected, restored, or allowed to be converted into a plantation. But up to now, most studies have focused on a limited number of factors, making the overall impact on the whole ecosystem difficult to assess.

In this study, the researchers looked at over 80 metrics describing multiple aspects of the structure, biodiversity, and functioning of the tropical forest ecosystem—from soil nutrients and carbon storage, to photosynthesis rates and numbers of bird and bat species.

These were measured in study sites in three areas of Sabah, Malaysian Borneo that were either in undisturbed old growth forest, logged forest (moderately or heavily logged), or in previous logged forests that had been converted to oil palm plantations.

  • Don't write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems
    Old-growth primary forest harbors unique environmental conditions that are absent after the forest is logged. Credit: Robin Hayward
  • Don't write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems
    Selectively logging old-growth forest leaves a more open, hotter environment, but can still harbor a large amount of biodiversity. Credit: Robin Hayward

The research, unprecedented in investigating such a broad spectrum of indicators for the health of tropical forest in a single analysis, was made possible due to the wide range of study sites established and maintained by the South East Asia Rainforest Research Partnership.

In total, logging and conversion had widespread impacts, affecting most of the measured properties—60 of the 82 ecosystem metrics. However, there were clear differences between the two.

In general, logging mostly impacted factors associated with forest structure and environment.

Since logging in the tropics is generally selective—focusing on trees with particular commercial qualities—even low levels of logging alter the system. For example, when older, larger trees are removed, this creates gaps in the canopy, enabling rapid-growing species to emerge that have very different characteristics, including less dense wood and thinner leaves that are more vulnerable to herbivores.

Converting these logged forests to oil palm plantations, however, has greater impacts on biodiversity that go beyond those of logging alone. Species of birds, bats, , trees, vines, and soil microorganisms all showed greater reductions in abundance and diversity on plantations compared with logged forests.

  • Don't write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems
    A researcher measures a toad. Credit: Ed Turner
  • Don't write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems
    A crested lizard. Biodiversity remained relatively high even after logging of old-growth forests, suggesting that there is value in retaining logged forest for conservation. Credit: Charlie Marsh

This is likely due in part to the major changes in plant food resources and the shift to hotter and drier microclimates under the single layer of oil palm that follows conversion from logged forest.

Senior author, Professor Andrew Hector (Department of Biology, University of Oxford), said, "One of the key messages of the study is that selective logging and conversion differ in how they impact the forest ecosystem, meaning that conversion to plantations brings new impacts that add to those of alone."

According to the study team, this demonstrates that logged forest can still be valuable for maintaining biodiversity and should not be immediately 'written off' for conversion to oil palm plantations.

Professor Ed Turner (University of Cambridge), who co-led the study, said, "A key message of this work is that old-growth, intact forests are unique, but secondary-logged forests are also valuable and important in terms of their biodiversity and ecosystem functioning relative to the much-reduced levels seen in oil palm plantations."

  • Don't write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems
    The caterpillar of a nawab butterfly. Biodiversity remained relatively high even after logging of old-growth forests, suggesting that there is value in retaining logged forest for conservation. Credit: Charlie Marsh
  • Don't write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems
    A dung beetle perched on a leaf. The species richness of dung beetles, and the rate of dung removal, remained high even in logged forest. Credit: Charlie Marsh

One surprise for the research team was how variable the responses were.

Dr. Charlie Marsh (Department of Biology, University of Oxford at the time of the study, now National University of Singapore), lead author of the study, said, "Our study demonstrates that focussing on any single component of the ecosystem may lead to incomplete understanding of how the ecosystem responds as a whole.

"We were really surprised by the huge variability in how different facets of the ecosystem responded to deforestation. We saw increases, decreases, or sometimes no change at all. There were even aspects that would increase in logged forest, only to decrease in . When making decisions concerning land management and conservation, we must consider a broad suite of ecological properties."

More information: Charles J. Marsh et al, Tropical forest clearance impacts biodiversity and function whereas logging changes structure, Science (2025). .

Journal information: Science

Provided by University of Oxford

Citation: Logging and conversion of tropical forests to oil palm plantations have wide effects on ecosystems, study shows (2025, January 9) retrieved 16 September 2025 from /news/2025-01-conversion-tropical-forests-oil-palm.html
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