Landscape and patch attributes impacting medium- and large-sized terrestrial mammals in a fragmented rain forest
Tipo de material:
- Paisajes fragmentados
- Artfrosur
- Fragmented landscapes
- Cambio de uso de la tierra
- Land use change
- Mamíferos terrestres
- Terrestrial mammals
- Bosques tropicales
- Tropical forests
- Selva Lacandona (Chiapas, México)
- Lacandona Forest (Chiapas, Mexico)
- Biología y química Ciencias de la vida Biología animal (zoología) -- Mamíferos
- Disponible en línea
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Info Vol | Estado | Código de barras | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Artículos | Biblioteca Electrónica Recursos en línea (RE) | ECOSUR | Recurso digital | ECO400528512850 | ||
Artículos | Biblioteca San Cristóbal Artículos Hemeroteca (AR HM) | ECOSUR | 005 | Disponible | 510911C52879-10 |
Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
Understanding the response of biodiversity to land-use changes is an important challenge for ecologists. We assessed the effects of five landscape metrics (forest cover, number of patches, edge density, mean inter-patch isolation distance and matrix quality) and three patch metrics (patch size, shape and isolation) on the number of species and patch occupancy of medium- and large-sized terrestrial mammals in the fragmented Lacandona rain forest, Mexico. We sampled mammal assemblages in 24 forest patches and four control areas within a continuous forest. The landscape metrics were measured within a 100-ha buffer, and within a 500-ha buffer from the centre of each sampling site. A total of 21 species from 13 families was recorded. The number of species increased with shape complexity and patch size at the patch scale, and with matrix quality within 100-ha landscapes. When considering 500-ha landscapes, only the number of patches (i.e. forest fragmentation level) tended to have a negative influence at the community level. Different landscape and patch metrics predicted the occurrence of each species within the sites. Our results indicate that there is a gradient of tolerance to forest cover change, from highly sensitive species to those tolerant of, or even benefited by, forest-cover change. Inglés
Disponible en línea
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