Forest cover is more important than its integrity or landscape configuration in determining habitat use by mammals in a human-modified landscape in Colombia

被引:1
作者
Pardo, Lain E. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Gomez-Valencia, Bibiana [2 ]
Deere, Nicolas J. [4 ]
Varon, Yenifer Herrera [2 ]
Soto, Carolina [2 ]
Noguera-Urbano, Elkin A. [2 ]
Sanchez-Clavijo, Lina M. [2 ]
Romero, Luis [2 ]
Diaz-Pulido, Angelica [2 ]
Ochoa-Quintero, Jose Manuel [2 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Panthera, 8W 40th St, New York, NY 10018 USA
[2] Inst Invest Recursos Biol Alexander Von Humboldt, Bogota, Colombia
[3] Nelson Mandela Univ, Sch Nat Resource Management, George Campus, George, South Africa
[4] Univ Kent, Durrell Inst Conservat & Ecol DICE, Canterbury CT2 7NR, England
[5] Univ Fed Mato Grosso do Sul, Campo Grande, Brazil
来源
GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION | 2024年 / 55卷
关键词
Fragmentation; Multispecies occupancy model; Montes de Maria; Forest integrity; CONSERVATION; BIODIVERSITY; EXTINCTION; DIVERSITY; COMMUNITIES; RICHNESS; PATTERNS; MODEL; SIZE;
D O I
10.1016/j.gecco.2024.e03232
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Human activities shape the structure of landscapes in different ways and hence modify animal communities depending on the type and intensity of these activities. The Montes de Maria subregion of Colombia has experienced a heavy transformation of most areas despite covering one of the last remnants of dry forest, a critically endangered ecosystem. However, the effects of this transformation have been little explored. Here, we used a multispecies occupancy model (MSOM) to understand the relative influence of three components of land-use change - deforestation (remaining forest amount), degradation of forest integrity (forest quality) and fragmentation (landscape configuration) on mammalian habitat use across a mosaic of tropical dry forest in Colombia. Our data suggest that the percentage of forest cover was substantially important for herbivores, and consistently showed a moderate effect on the entire community and some individual species. High variability in species-specific responses to the examined variables hindered broad taxonomic generalizations, nevertheless, we detected a moderate positive effect of forest cover in both diet specialists and generalists species, as well as in species with small home ranges. Although omnivores responses, tended to use less complex landscapes (mosaics of land uses), there was high uncertainty in this response. The lack of substantial effects on most species, and the absence of threatened species across this anthropogenic landscape, suggests that the current community is composed of species tolerant to habitat modifications, but not only diet generalist species. This is most likely the result of a long filtering process caused by land use transformation and hunting which could have caused non-sensitive species to distribute relatively homogenously across this landscape. Our results suggest that conservation strategies in the study area should focus on conserving and expanding as much forest as possible rather than only improving the quality of already existing forest patches.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 72 条
  • [1] [Anonymous], 2007, Ecosistemas continentales, costeros y marinos de Colombia
  • [2] [Anonymous], 2016, Applied hierarchical modeling in ecology analysis of distribution, abundance, and species richness in R and BUGS
  • [3] Designing optimal human-modified landscapes for forest biodiversity conservation
    Arroyo-Rodriguez, Victor
    Fahrig, Lenore
    Tabarelli, Marcelo
    Watling, James, I
    Tischendorf, Lutz
    Benchimol, Maira
    Cazetta, Eliana
    Faria, Deborah
    Leal, Inara R.
    Melo, Felipe P. L.
    Morante-Filho, Jose C.
    Santos, Braulio A.
    Arasa-Gisbert, Ricard
    Arce-Pena, Norma
    Cervantes-Lopez, Martin J.
    Cudney-Valenzuela, Sabine
    Galan-Acedo, Carmen
    San-Jose, Miriam
    Vieira, Ima C. G.
    Slik, J. W. Ferry
    Nowakowski, A. Justin
    Tscharntke, Teja
    [J]. ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2020, 23 (09) : 1404 - 1420
  • [4] When good animals love bad habitats: Ecological traps and the conservation of animal populations
    Battin, J
    [J]. CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2004, 18 (06) : 1482 - 1491
  • [5] Factors outside privately protected areas determine mammal assemblages in a global biodiversity hotspot in the Andes
    Bedoya-Duran, Maria Juliana
    Murillo-Garcia, Oscar E.
    Branch, Lyn C.
    [J]. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 2021, 32
  • [6] Defaunation affects carbon storage in tropical forests
    Bello, Carolina
    Galetti, Mauro
    Pizo, Marco A.
    Magnago, Luiz Fernando S.
    Rocha, Mariana F.
    Lima, Renato A. F.
    Peres, Carlos A.
    Ovaskainen, Otso
    Jordano, Pedro
    [J]. SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2015, 1 (11):
  • [7] Tayra (Eira barbara) landscape use as a function of cover types, forest protection, and the presence of puma and free-ranging dogs
    Bianchi, Rita
    Jenkins, Julianna M. A.
    Lesmeister, Damon B.
    Gouvea, Jessica Abonizio
    Cesario, Clarice Silva
    Fornitano, Larissa
    de Oliveira, Mateus Yan
    de Morais, Kimberly Danielle Rodrigues
    Ribeiro, Renan Lieto Alves
    Gompper, Matthew E.
    [J]. BIOTROPICA, 2021, 53 (06) : 1569 - 1581
  • [8] Biodiversity extinction thresholds are modulated by matrix type
    Boesing, Andrea Larissa
    Nichols, Elizabeth
    Metzger, Jean Paul
    [J]. ECOGRAPHY, 2018, 41 (09) : 1520 - 1533
  • [9] Richness, diversity, and factors influencing occupancy of mammal communities across human-modified landscapes in Colombia
    Boron, Valeria
    Deere, Nicolas J.
    Xofis, Panteleimon
    Link, Andres
    Quinones-Guerrero, Andres
    Payan, Esteban
    Tzanopoulos, Joseph
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2019, 232 : 108 - 116
  • [10] Camargo-Sanabria Angela A, 2015, Proc Biol Sci, V282, P20142580, DOI 10.1098/rspb.2014.2580