GSTDTAP  > 气候变化
DOI10.1016/j.foreco.2018.04.049
Tree monocultures in a biodiversity hotspot: Impact of pine plantations on mammal and bird assemblages in the Atlantic Forest
Iezzi, M. E.1,2; Cruz, P.1,2; Varela, D.1,2; De Angelo, C.1,2; Di Bitetti, M. S.1,2,3
2018-09-15
发表期刊FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
ISSN0378-1127
EISSN1872-7042
出版年2018
卷号424页码:216-227
文章类型Article
语种英语
国家Argentina
英文摘要

Forest plantations of fast-growing exotic species constitute an important economic activity in tropical and temperate regions of developing countries. Large areas of native forests and grasslands are being turned into tree plantations without assessing their impacts on natural communities. We evaluated the effects of replacing native forests by non-native pine (Pinus taeda) plantations on the diversity and composition of assemblages of terrestrial mammals and ground-dwelling and understory birds, in a forest productive landscape of the Upper Parana Atlantic Forest of Misiones, Argentina. Camera-trap stations were deployed in three different "environments": 53 in a continuous forest, 69 in forest fragments, and 62 in tree plantations. The evaluation focused on the effect of the environment, the structural complexity of the vegetation, the cost-distance (distance weighted by connectivity) to the continuous forest, the percentage of native forest within different radii, and the cost of human access (as a proxy for hunting pressure) on both mean species richness per station and species composition. Alpha diversity of the assemblages of each environment was estimated using Hill numbers (effective number of species): (q(0) = richness, q(1) = number of common species and q(2) = number of dominant species. Changes in community composition were evaluated by comparing the assemblages of the three environments using three similarity indices: Sorensen (q(0) = similarity in species identity), Horn (q(1) = similarity in common species), and Morisita-Horn (q(2) = similarity in dominant species). For mammals and birds, richness was significantly higher in forest stations (both continuous and fragmented) than in those located in plantations. For both taxa, it also decreased with the distance to the continuous forest (but with a negative quadratic term in birds). Tree plantation stands contained biased and impoverished subsets of the original assemblages. Mammal composition was affected by the environment, the distance to the continuous forest, the proportion of native forest in the landscape, and human access. The bird assemblages of plantations were seriously affected, and their composition was also influenced by changes in vegetation structure. Alternative management practices (e.g. pruning, thinning) and landscape features can partially mitigate the negative effect of tree plantations on mammal and bird assemblages. Large areas of forest that function as population sources and forest fragments immersed in the matrix of plantations are strictly necessary to preserve the original native mammal and bird assemblages in the productive landscape. Promoting connectivity and improving hunting controls will also support their conservation.


英文关键词Productive landscape Tree plantations Species richness Species composition Human access Forest fragments
领域气候变化
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000437967900021
WOS关键词LANDSCAPE TRANSFORMATION ; LARGE-SCALE ; SPATIAL-PATTERNS ; MODEL SELECTION ; DIVERSITY ; HABITAT ; CONSERVATION ; RESPONSES ; EXTRAPOLATION ; RAREFACTION
WOS类目Forestry
WOS研究方向Forestry
引用统计
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/24114
专题气候变化
作者单位1.Univ Nacl Misiones UNaM, CONICET, IBS, Bertoni 85, Puerto Iguazu, Misiones, Argentina;
2.Asociac Civil Ctr Invest Bosque & Atlantico CeIBA, Bertoni 85, Puerto Iguazu, Misiones, Argentina;
3.UNaM, Fac Ciencias Forestales, Eldorado, Misiones, Argentina
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Iezzi, M. E.,Cruz, P.,Varela, D.,et al. Tree monocultures in a biodiversity hotspot: Impact of pine plantations on mammal and bird assemblages in the Atlantic Forest[J]. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT,2018,424:216-227.
APA Iezzi, M. E.,Cruz, P.,Varela, D.,De Angelo, C.,&Di Bitetti, M. S..(2018).Tree monocultures in a biodiversity hotspot: Impact of pine plantations on mammal and bird assemblages in the Atlantic Forest.FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT,424,216-227.
MLA Iezzi, M. E.,et al."Tree monocultures in a biodiversity hotspot: Impact of pine plantations on mammal and bird assemblages in the Atlantic Forest".FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT 424(2018):216-227.
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