The importance of considering both taxonomic and habitat guild approaches in small mammal research

Studies on the effects of habitat fragmentation on small mammals often lead to confounding results as they only consider taxonomic groups in their analysis and neglect functional diversity of the communities. Here we describe the structure and composition of small mammal communities at 22 sites, ran...

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Veröffentlicht in:Austral ecology 2016-12, Vol.41 (8), p.854-863
Hauptverfasser: Santos-Filho, Manoel, Bernardo, Christine S. S., Silva, Dionei José Da, Ignácio, Aurea Regina Alves, Canale, Gustavo Rodrigues
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container_issue 8
container_start_page 854
container_title Austral ecology
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creator Santos-Filho, Manoel
Bernardo, Christine S. S.
Silva, Dionei José Da
Ignácio, Aurea Regina Alves
Canale, Gustavo Rodrigues
description Studies on the effects of habitat fragmentation on small mammals often lead to confounding results as they only consider taxonomic groups in their analysis and neglect functional diversity of the communities. Here we describe the structure and composition of small mammal communities at 22 sites, ranging from 41 to 7035 ha, in a hyper‐fragmented landscape of an Amazonia‐Cerrado ecotone. Also, in considering a taxonomic and habitat guild approach, we report the effects of habitat structures and patch spatial attributes on richness, abundance and species composition. Small mammal richness reported in southern Amazonia (N = 23 species) is greater than most previous studies in the tropics. All rare small mammals captured in this study were forest interior species. Richness of forest interior species was positively related to larger patches, as shown by the species–area relationship. However, 52% of the small mammal species were in forest fragments smaller than 50 ha, highlighting the importance of preserving both large and small forest fragments in a landscape with accelerated habitat reduction. Richness of edge‐tolerant species was not associated with the tested variables, yet edge‐tolerant species were more abundant in degraded environments. Marsupials were positively associated with vertical habitat structures, while rodents were more strongly related to a ground‐level habitat structure. The landscape studied is extremely variable and has contributed to the difficulty in detecting clear patterns, particularly when considering only one approach. Because of the complementary outputs when analysing either taxonomic groups or habitat guilds, we recommend the use of multi‐taxa studies of different guilds to assist decision makers in designing conservation strategies and appropriate management of small mammal populations.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Animal behavior
deforestation
edge tolerant
forest interior
marsupial
rodent
Small mammals
Studies
Taxonomy
title The importance of considering both taxonomic and habitat guild approaches in small mammal research
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