Emergent properties of species-habitat networks in an insular forest landscape

Deforestation and fragmentation are pervasive drivers of biodiversity loss, but how they scale up to entire landscapes remains poorly understood. Here, we apply species-habitat networks based on species co-occurrences to test the effects of insular fragmentation on multiple taxa-medium-large mammals...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science advances 2022-08, Vol.8 (34), p.eabm0397-eabm0397
Hauptverfasser: Palmeirim, Ana Filipa, Emer, Carine, Benchimol, Maíra, Storck-Tonon, Danielle, Bueno, Anderson S, Peres, Carlos A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Deforestation and fragmentation are pervasive drivers of biodiversity loss, but how they scale up to entire landscapes remains poorly understood. Here, we apply species-habitat networks based on species co-occurrences to test the effects of insular fragmentation on multiple taxa-medium-large mammals, small nonvolant mammals, lizards, understory birds, frogs, dung beetles, orchid bees, and trees-across 22 forest islands and three continuous forest sites within a river-damming quasi-experimental landscape in Central Amazonia. Widespread, nonrandom local species extinctions were translated into highly nested networks of low connectance and modularity. Networks' robustness considering the sequential removal of large-to-small sites was generally low; between 5% (dung beetles) and 50% (orchid bees) of species persisted when retaining only
ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.abm0397