Resolving the debate over forest fragmentation’s impact on ecosystem resilience

Forest fragmentation—the division of large, intact woodlands into smaller patches—has emerged as a critical issue in 21st-century global land cover change, with far-reaching implications for ecosystem health. By increasing forest edges, fragmentation alters forest structure, ecosystem functions, and ecosystem services (the benefits to humans) that potentially reshape resilience. Yet whether this process weakens or strengthens resilience has been a long-standing debate.

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