Skip to main content

Environmental change and rain forests on the Sunda shelf of Southeast Asia: drought, fire and the biological cooling of biodiversity hotspots

Abstract

Environmental change during the Quaternary period has caused changes in the composition and structure of vegetation on the Sunda shelf of Southeast Asia. Climatic conditions drier than the present, particularly during the peak of the last ice age, led to a reduction in the extent of rain forests. Most recently, there has been a close association between drought and the occurrence of major, rain forest fires. Although many rain forest trees show adaptations to periodic drought, this is not the case for frequent or intense fires. Over evolutionary time-scales, major fires may thus have been largely confined to driver vegetation types, such as monsoon and deciduous forests, and only infrequently penetrated rain forest areas. Continental-scale distribution patterns for rain forest species reveal a number of biodiversity hotspots that are consistent for a broad range of taxonomically unrelated taxa. These biodiversity hotspots account for a relatively small part of the total extent of rain forest; they may also represent ecologically relatively stable areas. This paper discusses the location and extent of biodiversity hotspots on the Sunda shelf within the context of past and present environmental change. It finds that whatever the history of biodiversity hotspots, they are increasingly threatened by contemporary environmental change, notably a trend towards increasingly frequent and intense fires. The paper concludes that the trend is likely to continue, without major changes in those activities that degrade and precondition to fire remaining areas of rain forest.

This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.

References

  • Achard F and Estreguil C (1995) Forest classification of Southeast Asia using NOAA AVHRR data. Remote Sensing of Environment 54: 198–208

    Google Scholar 

  • Allen B (1989) Frost and drought through time and space, Part 1: the climatological record. Mountain Research and Development 9: 252–278

    Google Scholar 

  • Allen B, Brookfield H and Byron Y (1989) Frost and drought through time and space, Part II: the written, oral and proxy records and their meaning. Mountain Research and Development 9: 279–305

    Google Scholar 

  • Ashton P, Givnish T and Appanah S (1988) Staggered flowering in the dipterocarpaceae: new insights into floral induction and the evolution of mass fruiting in the aseasonal tropics. The American Naturalist 132: 44–66

    Google Scholar 

  • Barnard P, Brown CJ, Jarvis AM, Robertson A and Van Rooyen L (1998) Extending the Namibian Protected Area network to safeguard hotspots of endemism and diversity. Biodiversity and Conservation 7: 531–547

    Google Scholar 

  • Bernard S and De Koninck R (1996) The retreat of the forest in Southeast Asia: a cartographic assessment. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 17: 1–14

    Google Scholar 

  • Beaman RS, Beaman JH, Marsh CW and Woods PV (1985) Drought and forest fires in Sabah in 1983. Sabah Society Journal 8: 10–30

    Google Scholar 

  • Brandon-Jones D (1996) The Asian colobinae (Mammalia: Cercopithecidae) as indicators of Quaternary climatic change. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 59: 327–350

    Google Scholar 

  • Brookfield H, Potter L and Byron Y (1995) In: Place of the Forest Environmental and Socio-Economic Transformation in Borneo and the Eastern Malay Peninsula. United Nations University Press, Tokyo

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown N (1998) Out of control: fires and forestry in Indonesia. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 13: 41

    Google Scholar 

  • Bruenig EF (1996) Conservation and Management of Tropical Rainforests. An Integrated Approach to Sustainability. CAB International, Wallingford, UK

    Google Scholar 

  • Bush M (1996) Amazonian conservation in a changing world. Biological Conservation 76: 219–228

    Google Scholar 

  • Charles C (1998) Ends of an Era. Nature 394: 422–423

    Google Scholar 

  • Colgan MW (1990) El Niño and the history of Eastern Pacific reef building. In: Glynn PW (ed) Global Ecological Consequences of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation, Elsevier Oceanography Series, 52, pp 183–229. Elsevier, Amsterdam

    Google Scholar 

  • Colinvaux PA, De Oliveria PE, Moreno JE, Miller MC and Bush MB (1996) A long pollen record from lowland Amazonia: forest and cooling in glacial times. Science 274: 85–88

    Google Scholar 

  • Dale VH (1997) The relationship between land use change and climate change. Ecological Applications 7: 753–769

    Google Scholar 

  • Davies SD (1995) Identifying sites of global importance for conservation: the IUCN/WWF Centres of Plant Diversity Project. In: Primack RN and TE Lovejoy (ed) Ecology, Conservation and Management of Southeast Asian Rainforests, pp 176–203. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT

    Google Scholar 

  • Duplessy JC (1982) Glacial to interglacial contrasts in the northern Indian Ocean. Nature 295: 494–498

    Google Scholar 

  • FjeldsÃ¥ J and Lovett JC (1997) Biodiversity and environmental stability Biodiversity and Conservation 6: 315–323

    Google Scholar 

  • FjeldsÃ¥ J, Ehrlich D, Lambin E and Prins E (1997) Are biodiversity 'hotspots' correlated with current ecoclimatic stability? A pilot study using the NOAA-AVHRR remote sensing data. Biodiversity and Conservation 6: 401–427

    Google Scholar 

  • Flenley JR (1979) The Equatorial Rain Forest A Geological History. Butterworths, London

    Google Scholar 

  • Folster H (1994) Stability of forest ecosystems in the humid tropics. Interciencia 19: 291–296

    Google Scholar 

  • Freifelder RR, Vitousek PM and D'Antonio CM (1998) Microclimate change and effect on fire following forest-grass conversion in seasonally dry tropical woodland. Biotropica 30: 266–297

    Google Scholar 

  • Gan TG (1972) Smoke haze over Singapore October 1972 Meteorological Memoir No. 10. Meteorological Service, Singapore

    Google Scholar 

  • Geyh MA, Kudrass HR and Streif H (1979) Sea-level changes during the late Pleistocene and Holocene in the Straits of Malacca. Nature 278: 441–443

    Google Scholar 

  • Gianno R (1986) The exploitation of resinous products in a lowland Malaysian forest. Wallaceanna 43: 3–6

    Google Scholar 

  • Goldammer JG (1991) Tropical wild-land fires and global changes: prehistoric evidence, present fire regimes and future trends In: Levine JS (ed.) Global Biomass Burning Atmospheric, Climatic and Biospheric Implications, pp 83–91. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, Cambridge

    Google Scholar 

  • Goldammer JG and Seibert B (1989) Natural rainforest fires in eastern Borneo during the Pleistocene and Holocene. Naturwissenscaften 76: 518–519

    Google Scholar 

  • Goldammer JG and Seibert B (1990) The impact of drought and forest fires on tropical lowland rain forest of East Kalimantan In: Goldammer JG (ed) Fire in the Tropical Biota: Ecosystem Processes and Global Challenges, Ecological Studies 84, pp 11–31. Springer-Verlag, Berlin

    Google Scholar 

  • Goldammer JG, Seibert B and Schindele W (1996) Fire in Dipterocarp forests. In: Schulte A and Schoene D (eds) Dipterocarp Forest Ecosystems: Towards Sustainable Management, pp 155–185.World Scientific, Singapore

    Google Scholar 

  • Haffer J (1969) Speciation in Amazonian Forest Birds. Science 165: 131–137

    Google Scholar 

  • Haffer J (1997) Alternative models of vertebrate speciation in Amazonia: an overview. Biodiversity and Conservation 6: 451–476

    Google Scholar 

  • Harger JRE (1992) Global change, temperature patterns, ENSO variations and climate effects as shown by long-term data from Indonesia and the Philippines. Paper presented at the Workshop on Transboundary Pollution of Haze in the ASEAN region, Balikpapan, Indonesia

  • Harte J (1996) Feedbacks, thresholds and synergies in global change: population as a dynamic factor. Biodiversity and Conservation 5: 1069–1083

    Google Scholar 

  • Harte J, Torn M and Jensen D (1992) The nature and consequences of indirect linkages between climate change and biological diversity. In: Peters RL and Lovejoy TE (eds) Global Warming and Biological Diversity, pp 325–343. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT

    Google Scholar 

  • Hawthorne WD (1996) Holes and the sum of parts in Ghanaian forest: regeneration, scale and sustainable use. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Section B Biological Sciences 104: 75–176

    Google Scholar 

  • Henderson-Sellers A (1993) Climate model predictions for the South-East Asian region. In: Brookfield H and Byron Y (eds) South-East Asia's Environmental Future The Search for Sustainability, pp 133–150. United Nations University Press, Tokyo

    Google Scholar 

  • Hesp PA, Chang CH, Hilton M, Chou LM and Turner I (1998) A first tentative sea-level curve for Singapore. Journal of Coastal Research 14: 308–314

    Google Scholar 

  • Holdsworth AR and Uhl C (1997) Fire in Amazonian selectively logged rain forest and the potential for fire reduction. Ecological Applications 7: 713–725

    Google Scholar 

  • Hope G and Tulip J (1994) A long vegetation history from lowland Irian Jaya, Indonesia. Palaeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 109: 385–398

    Google Scholar 

  • Hope GS and Peterson JA (1976) Palaeoenvironments In: Hope GS, Peterson JA, Allison I and Radok U (eds) The Equatorial Glaciers of New Guinea, pp 173–205. Balkema, Rotterdam

    Google Scholar 

  • Hopkins MS and Graham AW (1984) Viable soil seed banks in disturbed lowland tropical rain-forest sites in north Queensland. Australian Journal of Ecology 9: 71–74

    Google Scholar 

  • Hopkins MS, Ash J, Graham AW, Head J and Hewett RK (1993) Charcoal evidence of the spatial extent of the Eucalyptus woodland expansions and rain forest contractions in North Queensland during the late Pleistocene. Journal of Biogeography 20: 357–372

    Google Scholar 

  • Hulme M and Viner D (1995) A climate change scenario for assessing the impact of climate change on tropical rain forests. WWF US, Washington

    Google Scholar 

  • IPCC (1995) Climate Change 1995 The Science of Climate Change Summary for Policy Makers. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    Google Scholar 

  • Johns RJ (1989) The influence of drought on tropical rainforest vegetation in Papua New Guinea. Mountain Research and Development 9: 248–251

    Google Scholar 

  • Johnson RW and Tothill JC (1985) Definition and broad geographic outline of savanna lands. In: Tothill JC and Mott JJ (eds) Ecology and Management of the World's Savannas, pp 1–13. Australian Academy of Sciences, Canberra

    Google Scholar 

  • Kauffman JB, Cummings DL, Ward DE and Babbitt R (1995) Fire in the Brazilian Amazon. 1. Biomass, nutrient pools and losses in slashed primary forest. Oecologia 104: 397–408

    Google Scholar 

  • Long AJ, Crosby MJ, Stattersfield AJ and Wege DC (1996) Towards a global map of biodiversity: patterns in the distribution of restricted-range birds. Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters 5: 281–305

    Google Scholar 

  • Lough JM and Fritts HC (1990) Historical aspects of El Niño-Southern Oscillation Information from tree rings. In: Glynn PW(ed) Global Ecological Consequences of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation, Elsevier Oceanography Series, 52, pp 285–321. Elsevier, Amsterdam

    Google Scholar 

  • Macgillivray CW, Grime JP, Band SR, Booth RE, Campbell B, Hendry GAF, Hillier SH, Hodgson JG, Hunt R, Jalili A, Mackey JML, Mowforth MA, Neal AM, Reader R, Rorison IH, Spencer RE, Thompson K and Thorpe PC (1995) Testing predictions of the resistance and resilience of vegetation subjected to extreme events. Functional Ecology 9: 640–649

    Google Scholar 

  • Malingreau J, Stephens G and Fellows L (1985) Remote sensing of forest fires: Kalimantan and North Borneo in 1982–3. Ambio 14: 314–321

    Google Scholar 

  • Maloney BK (1980) Pollen analytical evidence for early forest clearance in north Sumatra. Nature 287: 324–326

    Google Scholar 

  • Maloney BK (1981) A pollen diagram from Tao Sipinggan, a lake site in the Batak highlands of north Sumatra, Indonesia. Modern Quaternary Research in Southeast Asia 6: 57–76

    Google Scholar 

  • Markham A (1996) Potential impacts of climate change on ecosystems: a review of implications for policymakers and conservation biologists. Climate Research 6: 179–191

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin L, Fournier M, Mourguiart P, Sifeddine A, Turcq B, Absy ML and Flexor JM (1993) Southern oscillation signal in South American palaeoclimatic data of the last 7000 years. Quaternary Research 39: 338–346

    Google Scholar 

  • Mathews DM (1917) Conservator of Forests, British North Borneo to Chairman, British North Borneo Company, 20 April 1917. In: Correspondence Number 874/174 British North Borneo Company Papers. National University of Singapore Library, Singapore

    Google Scholar 

  • Meave J, Kellman M, MacDougall A and Rosales J (1991) Riparian habitats as tropical forest refugia. Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters 1: 69–76

    Google Scholar 

  • Meggars BJ (1994) Archaeological evidence for the impact of Mega-Niño events on Amazonia during the past two millennia. Climate Change 28: 321–338

    Google Scholar 

  • Moore PD (1996) Biodiversity and climate change dominate environmental research. Scientist 10: 14

    Google Scholar 

  • Muriuki JN, de Klerk HM, Williams PH, Bennum LA, Crowe TM and Vanden Berg E (1997) Using patterns of distribution and diversity of Kenyan birds to select and prioritise areas for conservation. Biodiversity and Conservation 6: 191–210

    Google Scholar 

  • Newsome J (1988) Late Quaternary vegetational history of the central highlands of Sumatra 1. Present vegetation and modern pollen rain. Journal of Biogeography 15: 363–386

    Google Scholar 

  • O'Brien KL (1996) Tropical deforestation and climate change. Progress in Physical Geography 20: 311–335

    Google Scholar 

  • Orr AG and Hauser CL (1996) Kuala Belalong, Brunei: A hotspot of old world butterfly diversity. Tropical Lepidoptrea 7: 1–12

    Google Scholar 

  • Ouahdi R (1997) Geochemical markers and productivity variations in the northwest Indian Ocean during the last 70 KA. The Socotra and Somali upwelling systems. Bulletin de la Societe geologique de France 168: 93–107

  • Overpeck JT, Rind D and Goldberg R (1990) Climate-induced changes in forest disturbance and vegetation. Nature 343: 51–53

    Google Scholar 

  • Pijnappel J (1860) Beschrijving van hetWestelijke Gedeelte van de Zuider-en Oosterafdeeling van Borneo. Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land-en Volkenkunde 3: 243–346

    Google Scholar 

  • Phillips OL (1997) The changing ecology of tropical forests. Biodiversity and Conservation 6: 291–311

    Google Scholar 

  • Pirazzoli PA (1991) World Atlas of Holocene Sea Level Changes. Elsevier Oceanography Series, 58. Elsevier, Amsterdam

    Google Scholar 

  • Prell WL (1984) Monsoon climates of the Arabian Sea during the late Quaternary: a response to changing solar radiation. In: Berger A, Imbrie J, Hays J, Kukla J and Saltzman B (eds) Milankovitch and Climate, pp 349–366. Reidel, Dordrecht, The Netherlands

    Google Scholar 

  • Reid WV (1998) Biodiversity hotspots. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 13: 275–280

    Google Scholar 

  • Rodgers WA, Owens CF and Homewood KM (1982) Biogeography of East African forest mammals. Journal of Biogeography 9: 41–54

    Google Scholar 

  • Ropelewski CF and Halpert MS (1987) Global and regional scale precipitation patterns associated with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation. Monthly Weather Review 115: 1606–1626

    Google Scholar 

  • Salati E and Nobre CA (1991) Possible climatic impacts of tropical deforestation. Climate Change 19: 177–196

    Google Scholar 

  • Salavsky N (1994) Drought in the rain forest: effects of the 1991 El Niño-Southern Oscillation event on a rural economy in West Kalimantan, Indonesia. Climatic Change 27: 373–396

    Google Scholar 

  • Sandford RL, Saldarriaga J, Clark KE, Uhl C and Herrera R (1985) Amazon rain-forest fires. Science 227: 53–55

    Google Scholar 

  • Schindele W, Thoma W and Panzer K (1989) The forest fire 1982/1983 in East Kalimantan. Part 1: The fire, the effects, the damage and technical solutions. Forest Research Report Number 5. Investigations of the steps needed to rehabilitate the areas of East Kalimantan seriously affected by fire. German Forest Inventory Service Ltd, Jakarta, Indonesia

    Google Scholar 

  • Scholes RJ and Vanbreemen N (1997) The effects of global change on tropical ecosystems. Geoderma 79: 9–24

    Google Scholar 

  • Shimokawa E (1988) Effect of a fire of tropical forest on soil erosion. In: A research on the process of earlier recover of tropical rain forest after a large scale fire in Kalimantan Timor, Indonesia. Occasional Paper Number 14, pp 2–11. Kagoshima University, Kagoshima

    Google Scholar 

  • Solomon AM and Kirilenko AP (1997) Climate change and terrestrial biomes: What if trees do not migrate? Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters 6: 139–148

    Google Scholar 

  • Stuijts I-LM (1993) Late Pleistocene and Holocene vegetation ofWest Java, Indonesia. Modern Quaternary Research in Southeast Asia 12: 1–173

    Google Scholar 

  • Stott PA, Goldammer JG and Werner WL (1990) The role of fire in the tropical lowland deciduous forests of Asia. In: Goldammer JG (ed) Fire in the Tropical Biota, pp 32–44. Springer-Verlag, Berlin

    Google Scholar 

  • Sun DZ (1997) El-Niño A coupled response to radiative heating. Geophysical Research Letters 24: 2031–2034

    Google Scholar 

  • Taylor D (1990) Late Quaternary pollen records from two Ugandan mires: evidence for environmental change in the Rukiga Highlands of south-west Uganda. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 80: 283–300

    Google Scholar 

  • Tjia HD and Fujii S (1992) Late Quaternary shore-lines in Peninsula Malaysia. In: Tjia HD and Abdullah SMS (eds) The Coastal Zone of Peninsula Malaysia, pp 28–41. Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Bangi

    Google Scholar 

  • Tuomisto H and Ruokolainen K (1997) The role of ecological knowledge in explaining biogeography and biodiversity in Amazonia. Biodiversity and Conservation 6: 347–357

    Google Scholar 

  • Turcq B, Sifeddine A, Martin L, Absy ML, Soubies F, Suguio K and Volkmer-Ribeiro C (1998) Amazonia rainforest fires: a lacustrine record of 7000 years. Ambio 27: 139–142

    Google Scholar 

  • Tutin CEG, White LJT and Mackanga-Missandzou A (1996) Lighting strike burns large forest tree in the Lope Reserve, Gabon. Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters 5: 36–41

    Google Scholar 

  • Tweede Kamer der Staten-General (1877–1878) Bijlagen van het Verslag der Handelingen van de Tweede Kamer der Staten-General: Bijlage C. Koloniaal Verslag. Staatsdrukkerij, ' s-Gravenhage

    Google Scholar 

  • Uhl C and Buschbacher R (1985) A disturbing synergism between cattle ranch burning practices and selective tree harvesting in the eastern Amazon, Biotropica 17: 265–268

    Google Scholar 

  • Uhl C, Clark K, Clark H and Murphy P (1981) Early plant succession after cutting and burning in the upper Rio Negro region of the Amazon basin.Journal of Ecology 69: 631–649

    Google Scholar 

  • Uhl C, Kauffman JB and Cummings DL (1988) Fire in the Venezuelan Amazon 2: Environmental conditions necessary for forest fires in the evergreen rainforest of Venezuela. Oikos 53: 176–184

    Google Scholar 

  • Van Campo E (1986) Monsoon fluctuations in two 20,000-yr BP Oxygen-Isotope/Pollen records off Southwest India. Quaternary Research 26: 376–388

    Google Scholar 

  • Van Camp E, Duplessy JC and Rossignol-Strick M (1982) Climatic conditions deduced from a 150,000 year oxygen isotope-pollen record from the Arabian Sea. Nature 296: 56–59

    Google Scholar 

  • Van der Kaars WA and Dam MAC (1995) A 135,000-year record of vegetational and climatic change from the Bandung area, West-Java, Indonesia. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 117: 55–72

    Google Scholar 

  • Verstappen HT (1980) Quaternary climatic changes and natural environment in SE Asia. Geo Journal 4: 45–54

    Google Scholar 

  • Viner D and Hulme M (1998) The Climate Impacts LINK Project: applying results from the Hadley Centre's Climate Change Experiments for Climate Change. Impact Assessments. University of East Anglia, Norwich

    Google Scholar 

  • Wells LE (1987) An alluvial record of El Niño events from northern coastal Peru. Journal of Geophysical Research 92: 14,463–14,470

    Google Scholar 

  • Whitmore TC (1982) Fleeting impressions of some Chinese rain forests. Commonwealth Forestry Review 61: 51–58

    Google Scholar 

  • Whitmore TC (1984) Tropical Rain Forests of the Far East, 2nd ed. Clarendon Press, Oxford

    Google Scholar 

  • Whitmore TC and Prance GT (1987) Biogeography and Quaternary History in Tropical America. Clarendon Press, Oxford

    Google Scholar 

  • Woods P (1989) Effects of logging, drought and fire on structure and composition of tropical forests in Sabah, Malaysia. Biotropica 21: 290–298

    Google Scholar 

  • Zhu H (1997) Ecological and biogeographical studies on the tropical rain forest of south Yaunnan, SW China with special reference to its relation with rain forests of tropical Asia. Journal of Biogeography 24: 647–662

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and Permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Taylor, D., Saksena, P., Sanderson, P. et al. Environmental change and rain forests on the Sunda shelf of Southeast Asia: drought, fire and the biological cooling of biodiversity hotspots. Biodiversity and Conservation 8, 1159–1177 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008952428475

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008952428475

  • rain forest
  • conservation
  • ecological stability
  • fire