Abstract

Human interventions alter stand structure, species composition, and regeneration capacity of the forest. There is no enough information on how different management systems affect the forest structure. The main objective of this study was to analyze the differences on stand structure and species composition caused by different logging intensities. The study was conducted in a lowland evergreen moist forest of 22 000 ha in Cameroon. The forest was subdivided into three forest types with different human impacts: 2-Logged, 1-Logged, and Unlogged. The diameter corresponding to mean basal area of stems of 2-Logged (31.8 cm, ) was almost equal to that of Unlogged (30.1 cm, ). 1-Logged had a lower diameter of 27.7 cm, . In the three forest types, the diameter distribution followed the inverse J-shaped curve frequently observed in natural forests. The stand basal area increased from 29.4 m2/ha in 2-Logged, to 32 m2/ha in 1-Logged, and to 35.3 m2/ha in Unlogged. These results indicated that logging affected natural regeneration in 2-Logged. Above 60 cm dbh, the logging effect was not visible. On 103 tree species found in the sample forest, only nine were classified as harvestable commercial species.

1. Introduction

With increasing climate change on the Earth, reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+) has gained momentum as a climate mitigation strategy [1]. In the tropics, large amounts of carbon are stored in biomass and soils of forests ecosystems [2]. Deforestation and forest degradation of tropical forests cause the emission of the carbon stored in the outgoing vegetation into the atmosphere through burning of slashed wood or gradual decay [3]. During the period between 1980 and 1190, tropical deforestation accounted for at least a quarter of all anthropogenic carbon emissions [46] and it represents currently about 20% of the total greenhouse gas emissions [1, 7]. Between 1990 and 2005, tropical deforestation progressed at an average rate of 11.3 million ha per year due to settlements or to abandonment of agricultural or forest use [3].

In Cameroon, over 18 million hectares of historic forests which are defined as forest cover prior to large-scale human disturbance have been cleared to make way for agriculture and human settlements. Most of this clearing occurred in the central part of the country within moist deciduous forests and savannah woodlands. Nearly 2 million hectares of forest were lost between 1980 and 1995 [8]. According to FAO [9], the forest cover changed from 26 076 000 ha in 1990 to 23 858 000 ha in 2000, representing an annual loss of 222 000 ha, and a deforestation rate per year of 0.90%. In the Congo Basin, the average deforestation rate per year in the period 1980–1995 was 0.60% [8]. This value decreases to 0.13% per year during the period 1990–2000 and increases to 0.26% per year during the period 2000–2005 [8, 10]. In Cameroon, the deforestation rate per year moved from 0.10% during the period 1990–2000 to 0.17% during the period 2000–2005 with a net deforestation rate per year of 0.03% in the same period [1012]. The annual deforestation rate reported by FAO [13] contrasted with these values. According to FAO [13] the forest lost per year was on average 220 000 ha which moved at a rate of 0.94% during the period 1990–2000, 1.02% during the period 2000–2005 and 1.07% during the period 2005–2010. Ernst et al. [14] explained that the difference between the two estimates may be due to the methodologies used for assessment.

Deforestation and forest degradation cause changes to soil physical, chemical, and biological properties that reduce site productivity [17]. These activities modify stand structure, species composition, and forest density which results from a change on microclimate, ground vegetation, and nutrient cycle [18]. The modifications caused by deforestation and forest degradation are abrupt and often drastic [19] and need assessment to evaluate their impact on the stand structure and species composition.

A survey in the study area aided with the map, the local population, and the information provided from forest administration allowed the subdivision of the municipal forest Yokadouma into three forest types with different human impacts, 2-Logged, 1-Logged, and Unlogged. The respective forests were compared to each other with regard to species composition and stand structure. The following questions prevailed: (1) what are the species composition and stand structure in the different forest types? (2) Has logging affected the biodiversity in logged forests? The main objective of this research was to analyze the structure, the diversity, and also the impact of harvest on the municipal forest Yokadouma under different logging intensities. The specific objectives of this study were (i) to analyze the species composition and stand structure of the different forest types, (ii) to analyze the impact of harvesting on the forest structure, and (iii) to compare the different forest types and explore their potential in species with commercial value.

2. Material and Methods

2.1. Study Site

Cameroon is a country of 475 000 km2, divided in 10 regions. The research area was situated in the eastern province of Cameroon, within the district of Boumba and Ngoko, in the subdistrict of Yokadouma. Yokadouma, the closest city of the study area, is in the heart of tropical moist deciduous forest; it is located at 650 km from Yaoundé, the political capital, and 900 km from Douala, the economic capital. This area has the most productive forest of the country. More than 50% of the forest concessions which have been already allocated are concentrated in the eastern province. Approximately the lower two thirds of the eastern province are covered with moist forests, which grow progressively as one travels south and east. The forests are composed of evergreen hardwood species. There are many species of secondary uses and several nontimber forest products (NTFP). Some of the species grow up to heights of 50 meters or more. There are also numerous ferns and orchids [10, 12, 20].

The forest research area has a surface of 22 000 ha and belongs to the municipality of Yokadouma. It is located between the latitude 3°17′33′′N and 3°25′9′′N and the longitude 14°44′22′′E and 14°53′33′′E. The geological formations in this area are of Precambrian origin, comprised of sandstones rich in quartz, schists, and limestones. Ferralitic acid soils of red and red-brown color with high clay content and a surface horizon characterized by a low activity of organic matters are dominant in this region; in some areas, the ferralitic soils are interwoven with hydromorphic soils of brown-black color which are rich in organic matters [20]. The topography is in general gently undulating with valleys and ridges among flat basins, ranging in elevation from 400 to 700 m above sea level [21]. The climate is equatorial of Guinean type, with four distinguished seasons constituted of two rainy seasons and two dry seasons. The climate has a classical feature distributed generally in four periods: from mid-March to mid-June, there is a shorter and less intensive rainy season; from mid-June to mid-August, there is a short dry season; from mid-August to mid-November, there is a long and heavy rainy season; from mid-November to mid-March, there is a long dry season. The mean temperature fluctuates between 23°C and 25°C with very low variation during the year. The annual rainfall varies between 1600 mm and 2000 mm [22]. The data used for construction of this figure were obtained at the “Direction Meteo Douala Cameroun” on the observed period 1982–1993. The river system in the municipal forest Yokadouma is very dense and belongs to the Congo Basin. The most important rivers are the Boumba and its affluents, the Landjoue, and the Mouapack rivers.

2.2. Data Collection

The study area was subdivided into three forest types with different human impacts. The three forests types were 2-Logged, 1-Logged, and Unlogged (Figure 1). 2-Logged was the part of forest where logging activities were carried out two times in the past. 1-Logged was the part of forest where logging activities were carried out once in the past. Unlogged was the part of forest where no reported logging activity took place in the past.

Many silvicultural parameters use one hectare as a reference unit [23]. Consequently, in each stratum, 10 sample plots of 1000 m2 each, representing a total of one hectare, were selected in the transect line on each forest type. The plots of rectangular shape of 20 m × 50 m each were located on transects, at interval of 500 m between plots (Figure 2). Subplots denoted by B in Figure 2, of 20 m × 5 m, were used for seedling assessment in each plot. All trees with dbh exceeding 20 cm were recorded in the 20 m × 50 m plot. In the subplot, recruits with dbh ranging between 10 and 19 cm were recorded additionally. Young trees with dbh less than 10 cm were not assessed to follow the rule of data collection for forest management in Cameroon which do not take into account this diameter range. In total, 30 plots representing an area of 3 ha were used for this study. For each tree, the species name, the dbh, the class of quality, the stratum, and their exact location on the field with and coordinates were assessed.

2.3. Data Analysis
2.3.1. Species Classification

Tree species were classified based on their current and future potential commercial value and also based on their size [24]. Four group species were used for classification: I: mature merchantable species, with diameter above the minimum felling diameter (MFD), II: immature merchantable species, with diameter under the minimum felling diameter, III: other trees species with MFD assigned by forest administration, and IV: all other tree species (or without assign MFD).

2.3.2. Analysis of Forest Structure

A forest stand can be characterized by the mean diameter, diameter distribution, stand height, stand density, basal area, stand volume, and other quantitative pieces of information collected from forest inventories [23]. In the tropics, the target parameter for many forest inventories for timber exploitation is diameter of tree species [2, 20]. This type of data usually provide basic information for analysis of diameter structure, diameter distribution, mean diameter, or dominant diameter of the forest stand. For characterizing the forest structure, we analyzed the mean diameter, the diameter distribution, the basal area, the floristic composition, and the diversity.

Diameter, Number of Stems, and Basal Area. For this study, the arithmetic mean diameter, the quadratic mean diameter, the diameter of tree corresponding to mean basal area of the stand, and the dominant diameter were used and compared to each other. Number of stems and basal area were used to measure the density of forest stands.

2.3.3. Floristic Composition

Different authors [20, 23, 25] considered the minimum representative area to have been reached when the increase in number of species per unit area remains below 10% when the sample plot area increases by 10%. The species-area curve of 2-Logged, 1-Logged, and Unlogged was plotted to assess the representativeness of the sample plots based on this hypothesis. Therefore, tree species were counted in an accumulative manner until no more new species appeared. The sampling error results from the fact that only a part of the entire population is assessed. The standard error of the mean basal area in this scope is the most suitable tool to measure the accuracy of the vegetation assessment. Sample size is sufficient when the standard error does not exceed the desired value. For most vegetation assessment, a standard error of 10% is tolerable [23, 26].

To determine and evaluate the ecological importance of species in a given forest stand, the Importance Value Index (IVI) has been used [2]. This index was used to rank the species and the families in each forest type.

2.3.4. Species Diversity

The determination of diversity in biological samples and forest communities can be done using different indices. Since their introduction in the 1960s, many indices have been developed to assess species diversity [27]. The most commonly used diversity indices can be grouped in system of diversity numbers developed by Hill [28] that includes species richness, the Simpson index, and a derivation of the Shannon-Wiener index [27]. For this study, we used Simpson index, Shannon-Wiener index, Evenness, and the complexity index to analyze the species diversity. Throughout this paper, Shannon-Wiener index will be used as Shannon index.

Simpson Index. The index according to Simpson [29] gives the probability of any two individuals drawn at random from an infinitely large community [23]. Simpson index was estimated by the following equation: where is the number of individuals in the th species, the total number of species, and the total number of individuals from all species in the studied stand. The value of is between 0 and 1. As increases, diversity decreases and Simpson index was therefore expressed as 1- [23].

Shannon Index. An appropriate measure of diversity to use for 1-ha plots is Shannon index (), which has shown to be more representative of diversity in larger areas [30]. Shannon index is a measure of uncertainty, providing the probability of picking a dominant species at random [31, 32]. The entropy of a discrete set of probability is defined as [33]. The entropy is the amount of information that is lacking and the information that will be gained if the true outcome is known [34]. Shannon index was estimated using the following equation: where is the probability of random selection of the th species (), the total number of species, and the natural logarithm. The maximum value of is the natural logarithm of the number of species ().

Evenness. Evenness () describes the distribution among species, reaching a value of 1 when all species have equal numbers of individuals or turns to 0 when there is a high variation between the species [32, 35]. According to [27, 36], it makes sense to consider species richness and species evenness as two independent characteristics. Evenness [37] was estimated with the following equation: where is the observed diversity according to Shannon, the maximum possible diversity, and the total number of species.

Stand Complexity. McElhinny et al. [38] defined stand complexity as a mathematical representation of the effects of two or more structural attributes, in a single number or index value. They argue that, for a larger pool of structural attributes, this index could function as a reliable indicator of stand level biodiversity and provide a better means for ranking stands in terms of their potential contribution to biodiversity. For this study, the following formula was used to assess and rank stand complexity: where is the basal area per hectare, the number of trees per hectare, and the number of species per hectare.

Similarity Index. The similarity between forest types was analyzed using Sorensen and Jaccard index using the formula [39]: where is the number of species common in two forest types, the number of species present only in forest type , and the number of species present only in forest type .

The effects of human intervention on forest structure and species diversity were further tested using one-way ANOVA. If the effects were significant, means were further analyzed by post hoc comparisons with a confidence level of . When there was no effect, the Levene test of homogeneity of variances was further performed.

3. Results

3.1. Vegetation Assessment and Error

Table 1 shows the values of mean basal area and standard deviation (SD) in m2 and standard error in percentage for this research. In all forest types, the standard error of mean basal area was below 10%, suggesting that the estimation of mean basal area is sufficiently accurate for vegetation assessment.

3.2. Mean Diameter

Table 2 shows the diameter of mean basal area of trees and the dominant diameter (arithmetic mean diameter of all trees above 60 cm dbh) in the three forest types. The diameter of mean basal area of 2-Logged (31.8 cm, ) was almost equal to that of Unlogged forest (30.1 cm, ). The 1-Logged had a lower value of 27.7 cm, . These figures were contrasted by the dominant diameter which shows bigger size diameter for Unlogged ( cm, ) and 1-Logged ( cm, ) compared to 2-Logged ( cm, ).

3.3. Forest Density

Figure 3 shows the diameter distribution of the three forest types. The inverse J-shaped diameter distribution frequently observed in natural forest can be viewed in these distributions. Table 2 shows the stem number per hectare (), the basal area per hectare (), and the corresponding relative values in percentage for the three forest types of the municipal forest Yokadouma. Stand basal area increased from 29.4 m2/ha with 369 trees per hectare in 2-Logged, to 31.9 m2/ha with 530 trees per hectare in 1-Logged, and to 35.3 m2/ha with 496 trees per ha in Unlogged.

Table 3 shows the number of stems per hectare (), the basal areas per hectare (), and the corresponding relative value in percentage in the four species groups in the study area. The low basal area in (7.4 m2/ha) with 12 trees per hectare indicated that target trees by selective logging with diameter equal or above the minimum felling diameter were constituted by few trees of bigger sizes. The relative high number of stems per hectare (80) with low basal area (3.6 m2/ha) in indicates that there is a good potential of regeneration if unsustainable logging and other human activities such as forest clearance do not hamper this situation. The very high number of trees per hectare in and (372) with basal area (21.2 m2/ha) indicates that the values of many species are still unknown or not well promoted to forest managers. Table 4 compares the distribution of stem number and basal area in each diameter class for the three forest types.

2-Logged and 1-Logged forests look similar in terms of relative frequency in basal area (31.0% and 31.5%, resp.) but are different in relative stem number (25.4% and 32.2%, resp.). This shows that bigger size trees with less individual may be more in 2-Logged than in 1-Logged. Class I contributes only to 3% of the stem number but to 23% of the basal area and Class IV represents 73% of stem number and 59% of basal area. Figure 4 shows the distribtion of the basal area in the three forest types (2-Logged, 1-Logged, and Unlogged) based on the group species classification (, and ) and also based on the diameter class distribution.

One-way ANOVA analysis at -level < 0.05 showed significant difference in mean diameter in the forest types studied with -level 0.034. There was no significant difference on basal area among the three forest types. Post hoc analyses performed with least significant difference showed significant difference in mean diameter between 1-Logged and 2-Logged with a -level of 0.025 and a significant difference between Unlogged and 1-Logged with a -level of 0.30. There was no significant difference between Unlogged and 2-Logged.

3.4. Floristic Composition

So far, the structure of the stand has been analyzed without considering the floristic composition. The species-area curve of 2-Logged, 1-Logged, and Unlogged was plotted to assess the representativeness of the sample plots. For this purpose, the tree species were counted in a cumulative manner until no more new species appeared. In the three forest types, the increase of sample plot area does not increase the species number by more than 10% above an area of 9000 m2. This suggests that our sample plots can be used for a floral analysis of the forest.

The most common tree species in the forest were ranked based on the Importance Value Index (IVI) [20]. In 2-Logged, the five most common species were Musanga cecropioides R. Brown, Terminalia superba Engl. & Diels, Triplochiton scleroxylon K. Schum, Klainedoxa gabonensis Pierre ex Engl., and Coelocaryon preussii Warburg.In 1-Logged, the five most common species were Meiocarpidium lepidotum (Oliver) Engl. & Diels, Terminalia superba Engl. & Diels, Cordia platythyrsa Baker, Trichilia welwitschii C.DC., and Staudtia kamerunensis Warb. Alstonia boonei De Wild and Mansonia altissima A. Chev. are also present with a relative importance value (sixth and ninth). In Unlogged, the five most common species were Triplochiton scleroxylon K. Schum., Meiocarpidium lepidotum (Oliver) Engl. & Diels, Corynanthe pachyceras K. Schum., Mansonia altissima A. Chev., and Ricinodendron heudelotii (Baill.) Pierre ex Pax.

The most common tree families in the three forest types were ranked according to their Importance Index Value [20]. For 2-Logged, the five most common families were Moraceae, Meliaceae, Combretaceae, Euphorbiaceae, andMalvaceae. For 1-Logged, the five most common families were Euphorbiaceae, Meliaceae, Apocynaceae, Annonaceae, andCombretaceae.For Unlogged, the five most common families were Malvaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Moraceae, Meliaceae, and Olacaceae. The tree families Meliaceae and Euphorbiaceae were present in the three forest types significantly with relative high importance for the first one. The species present in the Meliaceae family were Entandrophragma cylindricum Sprague, Trichilia dregeana Swynn. & Baker f., Trichilia welwitschii C.DC., Guarea cedrata (A. Chev.) Pellegr., Trichilia dregeana Swynn. & Baker f., and Entandrophragma angolense (Welw.) C.DC. The species present in the Euphorbiaceae family were Meiocarpidium lepidotum (Oliver) Engl. & Diels, Ricinodendron heudelotii (Baill.) Pierre ex Pax, Uapaca guineensis Muell. Arg., Tetrorchidium didymostemon (Baill.) Pax & K.Hoffm., Drypetes preussii (Pax) Hutch., Mareyopsis longifolia (Pax) Pax & K.Hoffm., and Drypetes gossweileri S. Moore. Combretaceae, Moraceae, and Malvaceaewere present in two forest types. The species dominating in Combretaceae was Terminalia superba Engl. & Diels. In the Moraceae family, the species found at varying importance were Neosloetiopsis kamerunensis Engl., Ficus exasperata Vahl., Bosqueia angolensis (Welw.) Ficalho, Myrianthus arboreus P. Beauv., and Milicia excelsa (Welw.) C.C. Berg. The Apocynaceae and Annonaceae families were only significantly present in 1-Logged and the Olacaceaefamily was only present in Unlogged. The tree species found in the Apocynaceae family were Tabernaemontana crassa Benth., Alstonia boonei De Wild, and Funtumia elastica (Preuss) Stapf. The tree species found in the Annonaceaefamily were Pachipodanthium staudtii Engl. & Diels, Polyalthia suaveolens Engl. & Diels, Monodora tenuifolia (Benth.) W. Ash, Enantia chlorantha Oliv., Anonidium mannii (Oliv.) Engl. & Diels, Xylopia staudtii Engl. & Diels, and Hexalobus chrispiflorus A. Rich. The tree species found in the Olacaceae family were Strombosia pustulata Oliv., Strombosia grandifolia Hook. f. ex Benth., Strombosiopsis tetrandra Engl., and Olax subscorpioidea Oliv.

For 2-Logged, the 10 most important species carried an index of 131 (corresponding to a proportion of 43%) while the rest constituted by 55 species carried only 169. In the same forest the 5 most important species carried an index of 84 (corresponding to a proportion of 28%), while the rest constituted by 60 species carried 216. For 1-Logged, the 10 most important species carried an index of 140 (corresponding to a proportion of 47%), while the rest constituted by 69 species carried only 160; the 5 most important species carried an index 96. For Unlogged, the 10 most important species carried an index of 115 (corresponding to a proportion of 38%), while the rest constituted by 69 species carried 185. For 2-Logged, the 5 most important families carried an index of 124 (corresponding to a proportion of 41%), while the rest constituted by 22 families carried only 176. For 1-Logged, the 5 most important families carried an index of 144 (corresponding to a proportion of 48%) while the rest constituted by 25 families carried only 156. For Unlogged, the 5 most important families carried an index of 151 (corresponding to a proportion of 50%), while the rest constituted by 28 families carried only 149.

3.5. Species Diversity

According to Simpson and Shannon index, there was a high degree of diversity in the three forest types with Unlogged the most diversified followed by 2-Logged and then by 1-Logged (Table 5). The same pattern was observed in the distribution of the three forest types according to Evenness index. Stand complexity showed a different pattern. According to this index, Unlogged was the most diversified followed by 1-Logged and 2-Logged; the index value of 2-Logged was almost half of the one of Unlogged which had a value close to that of 1-Logged.

At , one-way ANOVA analysis and Levene test showed no significant effect of the human intervention on the species diversity using Simpson index and Shannon index. Evenness showed significant difference when using Levene test of homogeneity of variances with , no significant effect with Brown-Forsythe test, and no significant difference with post hoc tests for pairwise comparison. At level < 0.10 the least significant difference showed significant difference between Unlogged and 2-Logged with . The similarity analysis performed showed that Unlogged and 1-Logged were much similar with a similarity index of 0.71, while it was only 0.66 between 1-Logged and 2-Logged and 0.64 between 2-Logged and Unlogged.

4. Discussion

4.1. Forest Structure

The result of this study showed a fast decrease in stem number from small diameter class to higher diameter classes in the three forest types and in the forest stand. In natural forests where natural regeneration takes place over a long period of time, the number of stems decreases from small to high diameters [2, 20, 23, 25]. The number of tree species per ha increased sharply if the individuals with dbhs between 1 and 10 cm were included. This finding was consistent with the study of Lamprecht [25] which showed in two forest types that the number of stems per hectare decreases from (; ) to (; ) when the trees are considered from 10 cm (diameter class 10–20 cm) and 20 cm (diameter class 20–30 cm), respectively. Van Laar and Akça [40] showed that in uneven-aged natural forests, decreasing distributions were observed which is consistent with this study. Lamprecht [25] indicated that stem numbers of 600 per hectare with a minimum dbh of 10 cm are generally typical of moist evergreen lowland forests. This number is slightly higher compared with the results of this study (369 N per ha for 2-Logged, 530 N per ha for 1-Logged, and 496 N per ha for Unlogged) which included a minimum dbh of 10 cm. Djomo et al. [2] studied tree density in agro-forest, managed forest, and national park in a moist forest in South western Cameroon. They found for trees with dbh equal or above 10 cm a range between 216 to 398 stem number per ha using larger plots of 250 m × 20 m (0.5 ha) in a total of 12 ha which is smaller compared to the result of this study. Tchouto et al. [41] in the similar forest used plots of 0.1 ha in a total area of 14.5 ha and found density of stems varying between 489 and 741 which was consistent with the result of this study. The present study used plots of 50 m × 20 m (0.1 ha) in a total of 3 ha. Plots dimension and plots distribution may also play a role in the assessment of the biodiversity and tree density within a forest. The inclusion of young trees less than 10 cm influences greatly the number of individuals per ha. Bockor [42] indicated that 4 900 individuals per ha were found in a forest in western part of Venezuela whilst Marmillod [43] found 5 587 trees per hectare in the Amazonian forest with diameter between 1 and 10 cm included. Djomo et al. [2] for diameter between 1 and 10 cm found density of stems per hectare varying between 2000 and 4600 in agro-forests, 3867 and 5800 in managed forests, and 4400 and 8400 in national park. This result was consistent with the values in moist forest in Venezuela and Amazon. This study did not measure individuals with diameter below 10 cm.

Brodbeck [23] found the basal area between 31.6 and 33.1 m2/ha for tree with dbh over 10 cm in three natural forests of Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Mitlöhner [44] reported basal areas of up to 31.7 m2/ha from dry deciduous forest of Paraguay with the same dbh above 10 cm. With the basal area of 32.6 m2/ha, our findings were consistent with the results of these forest stands. The smallest basal area and number of stems in 2-Logged indicate probably that there was a selective logging with unsustainable harvest which created serious damages on smaller trees. In 1-Logged the highest number of trees per hectare is an indicator that logging may have opened the gaps which facilitated the penetration of light and the growth of (pioneer) light demanding tree species. In 2-Logged, the biggest value of arithmetic mean (24.5 cm) is another indicator of few trees in smaller diameter class which resulted in a low number of stems per hectare. This pattern could also signify that logging took place in 2-Logged some years ago, and now there is a succession of shade baring trees which are progressively colonizing the pioneer light demanding, fast growing species.

In the Knysna forest, in South Africa, Schütz et al. [16] used basal area as a tool for harvest control. As in this study, they classified the forest in four categories: category I is mature trees of commercially valuable species that have reached a minimum threshold diameter; category II is immature trees of commercially valuable species which will reach class I when mature; category III is other noncommercial tree species; category IV is weed trees and undesirable exotic intruders (Figure 5). In each species class a threshold is defined beyond which all the trees corresponding to basal area above that level will be removed. As in Knysna forest (Figure 5), this study used 4 classes to group species with a similar classification system; Classes I and II had a similar definition, but Classes III and IV had different definition; this resulted in a different shape in basal area distribution among the two studies. Using basal area as harvest control method was not the aim of this study. However, we argue that this management system may have some advantages. In each class, harvest removes the surplus above the threshold. This also gives the possibility to other species which do not have a timber commercial value under the present definition to being harvested in Class III or in Class IV. Also, this may also help to easily do the promotion of species without commercial value through the investment in the research in those categories knowing that a harvest quota is assigned in the management system. A management system based only on basal area may have some drawback to monitor the harvest threshold in the field by forest technicians. This study recommends for logging a combination of diameter distribution showing the structure of the forest before and after the harvest as illustrated in Figure 3(b) and basal area control as in Knysna forest for sustainable management of forest.

4.2. Floristic Composition and Species Diversity

Djomo et al. [2] found 145 species with dbh more than 10 cm in a moist forest in south western part of Cameroon which was consistent with 105 species found in the present studied forest stand. Brodbeck [23] found 81, 89, and 92 species in three natural forests in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, which was close to the species range of 59, 65, and 79 found in 2-Logged, 1-Logged, and Unlogged in the present study. The species composition depicted different physiognomy between the eastern forest (this study) and the western forest [2] which are distant at about 600 km. Though there were some few species similarities between the two forests in terms of species composition, there was no similarity between the 10 most common species. The 5 most important according to IVI index represented on average 29% in the two eastern and western Cameroonian forests.

According to IVI index, in the three forest types of the present study, on average, only five species of the 10 most important species have known commercial timber value; this shows that there is much effort needed for valorization of species. A research on wood structure, wood property combined with sufficient promotion and valorization, can change the status of noncommercial species to commercial species of very high importance, highly demanded in the market. The ecological value of those species which will not be harvested because of lack of knowledge in their commercial value may play an important role for the carbon sequestration. Knowing that older trees still have to die or may contribute very little to carbon sequestration because of the low growth or growth saturation, valorization may combine ecological and economical functions of the forest. A sustainable harvest needs to be applied to ensure that only trees which have reach the minimum cutting size may be removed from the forest. Harvest analysis is required to ensure that there is sufficient number of small trees in the forest to substitute outgoing trees.

Species diversity takes into account different ecological considerations such as species richness, relative abundance, and evenness [38]. The results of this study followed the same patterns with the study of Brodbeck [23] who analyzed the species diversity in three natural forests in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, using Simpson index, Shannon index, and Evenness. Simpson and Shannon index followed the same pattern with Evenness. Mulder et al. [35] explained that this could be due to the fact that a greater evenness may be biologically equivalent to having more species. The complexity index showed a different pattern between the two studies mainly because Brodbeck [23] complexity index integrated the average height in addition to the three parameters associated in this study. When we removed from the study of Brodbeck [23] the average height as interacting parameter and recalculated the complexity factor, our results followed the same pattern except in the 2-Logged showing that the two loggings have seriously affected species diversity within this forest type. McElhinny et al. [38] explained that measuring diversity with indexes such as Shannon, Simpson, or Evenness may quantify only a single attribute and cannot be considered for structural complexity. This study shows that interaction between the attributes may change the perception of species diversity that may be obtained only from indexes mentioned above. Analyzing the complexity on biodiversity structure may integrate as much as attributes such as foliage, canopy cover, diameter, diameter distribution, tree height, tree spacing, tree uniformity, and dead wood. Williams [45] indicated that biodiversity is too broad to measure the entire range of different values or attributes that may affect biodiversity. He suggests refining biodiversity in terms of measurable attributes relevant to the scale and purpose for which it is being assessed which is what was done for this study. Similarity index is another index which may help to better understand the complexity and the difference between distinct forest stands. This index allowed to see that Unlogged and 1-Logged forests were much similar than the other forest types compared pairwise.

Conflict of Interests

The author declares that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgments

This study would not have been possible without the financial support of Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ). The financial assistance of Katholische Hochschulgemeinde (KHG) and International Student Services is greatly acknowledged. The contribution of Professor Dr. Klaus von Gadow in this study is highly acknowledged. The author also acknowledges the contribution of Professor Dr. Zapfack Louis for his review on scientific name of species and families. The author is grateful to the anonymous reviewer whose inputs have helped to improve the content of this paper.