Elsevier

Biological Conservation

Volume 197, May 2016, Pages 98-107
Biological Conservation

Biodiversity consequences of land-use change and forest disturbance in the Amazon: A multi-scale assessment using ant communities

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2016.03.005Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Ants were sampled over multiple landscapes and land-uses at a deforestation frontier.

  • Forest areas supported almost twice as many species as production areas.

  • Total landscape richness increases with the proportion of remaining primary forest.

  • Species composition varied consistently across a gradient of aboveground biomass.

  • Disturbed forests have an impoverished ant fauna but remain vital for conservation.

Abstract

Quantifying and understanding the main drivers of biodiversity responses to human disturbances at multiple scales is key to foster effective conservation plans and management systems. Here we report on a detailed regional assessment of the response of ant communities to land-use change and forest disturbance in the Brazilian Amazon. We aimed to explore the effects of land-use intensification at both site and landscape scales, examining variation in ant species richness and composition, and asking which set of environmental variables best predict observed patterns of diversity. We sampled 192 sites distributed across 18 landscapes (each 50 km2) in Paragominas, eastern Brazilian Amazon, covering ca. 20,000 km2. We sampled from undisturbed primary forest through varyingly disturbed primary forests, secondary forests, pastures and mechanised agriculture, following a gradient of decreasing total aboveground biomass. Irrespective of forest disturbance class, ant species richness was almost twice as high in forests when compared to production areas. In contrast, ant species composition showed continuous variation from primary forest to intensive agriculture, following a gradient of aboveground biomass. Ant species richness at all spatial scales increased with primary forest cover in the surrounding landscapes. We highlight the limited value of species richness as an indicator of changes in habitat quality, reinforcing calls to consider species composition in assessments of forest disturbance. Taken together, our results reveal the unique biodiversity value of undisturbed primary forests, but also show that disturbed primary forests and secondary forests have high conservation value, and thus play an important role in regional conservation planning.

Keywords

Biodiversity conservation
Forest degradation
Formicidae
Human-modified
Invertebrates
Rainforest

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