Howler monkey tolerance to habitat shrinking: Lifetime warranty or death sentence?

被引:51
作者
Bicca-Marques, Julio Cesar [1 ]
Chaves, Oscar M. [2 ]
Hass, Gabriela Pacheco [1 ]
机构
[1] Pontificia Univ Catolica Rio Grande do Sul, Escola Ciencias Saude & Vida, Lab Primatol, Ave Ipiranga,6681 Pd 11, BR-90619900 Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
[2] Univ Costa Rica, Escuela Biol, San Pedro Montes De Oca, Costa Rica
关键词
Alouatta spp; behavioral plasticity; habitat fragmentation; matrix threats; population extirpation; population persistence; ALOUATTA-GUARIBA-CLAMITANS; POPULATION VIABILITY ANALYSIS; HIGHLY FRAGMENTED LANDSCAPE; YELLOW-FEVER OUTBREAK; RAIN-FOREST; LOS TUXTLAS; PALLIATA-MEXICANA; LOCAL EXTINCTIONS; SOUTHERN BRAZIL; BLACK HOWLERS;
D O I
10.1002/ajp.23089
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to the conservation of nonhuman primates. Given that species differ in their responses to fragmented landscapes, identifying the factors that enable them to cope with altered environments or that cause their extirpation is critical to design conservation management strategies. Howler monkeys (Alouatta spp.) are good models for studying the strategies of tolerant arboreal taxa and how they cope with spatial restriction, because they live in habitats ranging from vast pristine forests to small disturbed fragments and orchards. While some aspects of their ecology and behavior are conserved, others vary in predictable ways in response to habitat shrinking and decreasing resource availability. We argue that the ability of individual howler monkeys to inhabit low-quality environments does not guarantee the long-term persistence of the small populations that live under these conditions. Their local extirpation explains why few forest fragments below a given area threshold are frequently inhabited in landscapes where recolonization and gene flow are compromised by long isolation distances or less permeable matrices. In sum, howlers' ability to cope with habitat restriction at the individual level in the short-term may mask the inevitable fate of isolated populations, thereby compromising the persistence of the species at a regional scale in the long-term if howlers' need for protection in large forests is undervalued.
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页数:9
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