Frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal Brazilian restinga habitats

We studied the species richness and composition of frogs in 10 restinga habitats (sand dune environments dominated by herbaceous and shrubby vegetation) along approximately 1500 km of coastal areas of three Brazilian States: Rio de Janeiro (Grumari, Maricá, Massambaba, Jurubatiba and Grussaí), Espír...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: CFD. Rocha, FH. Hatano, D. Vrcibradic, M. Van Sluys
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
Series:Brazilian Journal of Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842008000100014&lng=en&tlng=en
id doaj-b14d17a082bd4f919765ddab1a306d29
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b14d17a082bd4f919765ddab1a306d292020-11-24T21:01:30ZengInstituto Internacional de EcologiaBrazilian Journal of Biology1678-437568110110710.1590/S1519-69842008000100014S1519-69842008000100014Frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal Brazilian restinga habitatsCFD. Rocha0FH. Hatano1D. Vrcibradic2M. Van Sluys3Universidade do Estado do Rio de JaneiroUniversidade do Estado do Rio de JaneiroUniversidade do Estado do Rio de JaneiroUniversidade do Estado do Rio de JaneiroWe studied the species richness and composition of frogs in 10 restinga habitats (sand dune environments dominated by herbaceous and shrubby vegetation) along approximately 1500 km of coastal areas of three Brazilian States: Rio de Janeiro (Grumari, Maricá, Massambaba, Jurubatiba and Grussaí), Espírito Santo (Praia das Neves and Setiba) and Bahia (Prado and Trancoso). We estimated beta-diversity and similarity among areas and related these parameters to geographic distance between areas. All areas were surveyed with a similar sampling procedure. We found 28 frog species belonging to the families Hylidae, Microhylidae, Leptodactylidae and Bufonidae. Frogs in restingas were in general nocturnal with no strictly diurnal species. The richest restinga was Praia das Neves (13 species), followed by Grussaí and Trancoso (eight species in each). The commonest species in the restingas was Scinax alter (found in eight restingas), followed by Aparasphenodon brunoi (seven areas). Our data shows that richness and composition of frog communities vary consistently along the eastern Brazilian coast and, in part, the rate of species turnover is affected by the distance among areas. Geographic distance explained approximately 12% of species turnover in restingas and about 9.5% of similarity among frog assemblages. Although geographic distance somewhat affects frog assemblages, other factors (e.g. historical factors, disturbances) seem to be also involved in explaining present frog assemblage composition in each area and species turnover among areas. The frog fauna along restinga habitats was significantly nested (matrix community temperature = 26.13°; p = 0.007). Our data also showed that the most hospitable restinga was Praia das Neves and indicated that this area should be protected as a conservation unit. Frog assemblage of each area seems to partially represent a nested subset of the original assemblage, although we should not ignore the importance of historical factors. This nestedness pattern, in part, probably results from the intensive fragmentation of restinga habitats. Possibly, many frog species may have been lost in some studied areas as a result of the extensive habitat degradation to which restinga habitats are presently exposed.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842008000100014&lng=en&tlng=enRestinga habitatsAtlantic forestfrog richnessfrog assemblagesfaunal similarity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author CFD. Rocha
FH. Hatano
D. Vrcibradic
M. Van Sluys
spellingShingle CFD. Rocha
FH. Hatano
D. Vrcibradic
M. Van Sluys
Frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal Brazilian restinga habitats
Brazilian Journal of Biology
Restinga habitats
Atlantic forest
frog richness
frog assemblages
faunal similarity
author_facet CFD. Rocha
FH. Hatano
D. Vrcibradic
M. Van Sluys
author_sort CFD. Rocha
title Frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal Brazilian restinga habitats
title_short Frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal Brazilian restinga habitats
title_full Frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal Brazilian restinga habitats
title_fullStr Frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal Brazilian restinga habitats
title_full_unstemmed Frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal Brazilian restinga habitats
title_sort frog species richness, composition and beta-diversity in coastal brazilian restinga habitats
publisher Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
series Brazilian Journal of Biology
issn 1678-4375
description We studied the species richness and composition of frogs in 10 restinga habitats (sand dune environments dominated by herbaceous and shrubby vegetation) along approximately 1500 km of coastal areas of three Brazilian States: Rio de Janeiro (Grumari, Maricá, Massambaba, Jurubatiba and Grussaí), Espírito Santo (Praia das Neves and Setiba) and Bahia (Prado and Trancoso). We estimated beta-diversity and similarity among areas and related these parameters to geographic distance between areas. All areas were surveyed with a similar sampling procedure. We found 28 frog species belonging to the families Hylidae, Microhylidae, Leptodactylidae and Bufonidae. Frogs in restingas were in general nocturnal with no strictly diurnal species. The richest restinga was Praia das Neves (13 species), followed by Grussaí and Trancoso (eight species in each). The commonest species in the restingas was Scinax alter (found in eight restingas), followed by Aparasphenodon brunoi (seven areas). Our data shows that richness and composition of frog communities vary consistently along the eastern Brazilian coast and, in part, the rate of species turnover is affected by the distance among areas. Geographic distance explained approximately 12% of species turnover in restingas and about 9.5% of similarity among frog assemblages. Although geographic distance somewhat affects frog assemblages, other factors (e.g. historical factors, disturbances) seem to be also involved in explaining present frog assemblage composition in each area and species turnover among areas. The frog fauna along restinga habitats was significantly nested (matrix community temperature = 26.13°; p = 0.007). Our data also showed that the most hospitable restinga was Praia das Neves and indicated that this area should be protected as a conservation unit. Frog assemblage of each area seems to partially represent a nested subset of the original assemblage, although we should not ignore the importance of historical factors. This nestedness pattern, in part, probably results from the intensive fragmentation of restinga habitats. Possibly, many frog species may have been lost in some studied areas as a result of the extensive habitat degradation to which restinga habitats are presently exposed.
topic Restinga habitats
Atlantic forest
frog richness
frog assemblages
faunal similarity
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842008000100014&lng=en&tlng=en
work_keys_str_mv AT cfdrocha frogspeciesrichnesscompositionandbetadiversityincoastalbrazilianrestingahabitats
AT fhhatano frogspeciesrichnesscompositionandbetadiversityincoastalbrazilianrestingahabitats
AT dvrcibradic frogspeciesrichnesscompositionandbetadiversityincoastalbrazilianrestingahabitats
AT mvansluys frogspeciesrichnesscompositionandbetadiversityincoastalbrazilianrestingahabitats
_version_ 1716777794541715456