The role of livestock intensification and landscape structure in maintaining tropical biodiversity

1. As tropical cattle ranching continues to expand, successful conservation will require an improved understanding of the relative impacts of different livestock systems and landscape structure on biodiversity. Here, we provide the first empirical and multi-scale assessment of the relative effects o...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of applied ecology 2018-01, Vol.55 (1), p.185-194
Hauptverfasser: Alvarado, Fredy, Escobar, Federico, Williams, David R., Arroyo-Rodríguez, Víctor, Escobar-Hernández, Fernando
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container_end_page 194
container_issue 1
container_start_page 185
container_title The Journal of applied ecology
container_volume 55
creator Alvarado, Fredy
Escobar, Federico
Williams, David R.
Arroyo-Rodríguez, Víctor
Escobar-Hernández, Fernando
description 1. As tropical cattle ranching continues to expand, successful conservation will require an improved understanding of the relative impacts of different livestock systems and landscape structure on biodiversity. Here, we provide the first empirical and multi-scale assessment of the relative effects of livestock intensification and landscape structure on biodiversity in the threatened tropical dry forests of Mesoamerica. 2. We used a dataset of dung beetles (169,372 individuals from 33 species) collected from 201-km² landscapes, ranging from zero-yielding forest sites to high-yield cattle ranches and maize farms, to investigate the relative effect of livestock intensification (net cattle production; macrocyclic lactone use; annual dung production) landscape structure (landscape composition and configuration) at multiple spatial scales on different attributes of dung beetle communities using a multi-model averaging approach. 3. Dung beetle species richness, biomass and composition were more strongly related to landscape structure than to livestock intensification. 4. Forest cover was the best predictor of dung beetle assemblages, being positively related to species diversity and biomass across multiple spatial scales. The use of macrocyclic lactones was strong and negatively related to dung beetle communities at the local scale. 5. Synthesis and applications: Maximising forest protection through a "land sparing" strategy is likely to be the best strategy for reducing negative impacts of cattle farming on Neotropical dung beetle communities. However, increasing or maintaining yields while reducing agrochemical inputs will be important for conserving onfarm biodiversity and the ecosystem services that dung beetles provide in livestock-dominated landscapes.
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As tropical cattle ranching continues to expand, successful conservation will require an improved understanding of the relative impacts of different livestock systems and landscape structure on biodiversity. Here, we provide the first empirical and multi-scale assessment of the relative effects of livestock intensification and landscape structure on biodiversity in the threatened tropical dry forests of Mesoamerica. 2. We used a dataset of dung beetles (169,372 individuals from 33 species) collected from 201-km² landscapes, ranging from zero-yielding forest sites to high-yield cattle ranches and maize farms, to investigate the relative effect of livestock intensification (net cattle production; macrocyclic lactone use; annual dung production) landscape structure (landscape composition and configuration) at multiple spatial scales on different attributes of dung beetle communities using a multi-model averaging approach. 3. Dung beetle species richness, biomass and composition were more strongly related to landscape structure than to livestock intensification. 4. Forest cover was the best predictor of dung beetle assemblages, being positively related to species diversity and biomass across multiple spatial scales. The use of macrocyclic lactones was strong and negatively related to dung beetle communities at the local scale. 5. Synthesis and applications: Maximising forest protection through a "land sparing" strategy is likely to be the best strategy for reducing negative impacts of cattle farming on Neotropical dung beetle communities. 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As tropical cattle ranching continues to expand, successful conservation will require an improved understanding of the relative impacts of different livestock systems and landscape structure on biodiversity. Here, we provide the first empirical and multi-scale assessment of the relative effects of livestock intensification and landscape structure on biodiversity in the threatened tropical dry forests of Mesoamerica. 2. We used a dataset of dung beetles (169,372 individuals from 33 species) collected from 201-km² landscapes, ranging from zero-yielding forest sites to high-yield cattle ranches and maize farms, to investigate the relative effect of livestock intensification (net cattle production; macrocyclic lactone use; annual dung production) landscape structure (landscape composition and configuration) at multiple spatial scales on different attributes of dung beetle communities using a multi-model averaging approach. 3. 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As tropical cattle ranching continues to expand, successful conservation will require an improved understanding of the relative impacts of different livestock systems and landscape structure on biodiversity. Here, we provide the first empirical and multi-scale assessment of the relative effects of livestock intensification and landscape structure on biodiversity in the threatened tropical dry forests of Mesoamerica. 2. We used a dataset of dung beetles (169,372 individuals from 33 species) collected from 201-km² landscapes, ranging from zero-yielding forest sites to high-yield cattle ranches and maize farms, to investigate the relative effect of livestock intensification (net cattle production; macrocyclic lactone use; annual dung production) landscape structure (landscape composition and configuration) at multiple spatial scales on different attributes of dung beetle communities using a multi-model averaging approach. 3. Dung beetle species richness, biomass and composition were more strongly related to landscape structure than to livestock intensification. 4. Forest cover was the best predictor of dung beetle assemblages, being positively related to species diversity and biomass across multiple spatial scales. The use of macrocyclic lactones was strong and negatively related to dung beetle communities at the local scale. 5. Synthesis and applications: Maximising forest protection through a "land sparing" strategy is likely to be the best strategy for reducing negative impacts of cattle farming on Neotropical dung beetle communities. 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subjects Agricultural landscapes
Beetles
Biodiversity
Biomass
Bovidae
Cattle
Cattle production
cattle ranching
Coleoptera
Communities
Corn
Crop yield
Dry forests
Dung
dung beetles
Ecosystem services
Ecosystems
Farming
Farms
food production
Forest protection
Forests
Lactones
land sparing
Landscape
Livestock
Livestock farming
livestock‐dominated landscapes
Maximization
Multiscale analysis
Ranching
spatial heterogeneity
Species diversity
Species richness
Strategy
tropical biodiversity
tropical dry forest
Tropical forests
Wildlife conservation
title The role of livestock intensification and landscape structure in maintaining tropical biodiversity
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