Impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: A Mesoamerican perspective

Oil palm plantations expand rapidly in tropical regions, including the Neotropics. This study, quantifies the impact on the herpetofauna of the Pacific lowlands of Costa Rica. Amphibians and reptiles were sampled along transects in forest interior (FI), at forest margins (FM) and in oil palm plantat...

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Main Authors: Nina Gallmetzer, Christian H. Schulze
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-07-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198941500061X
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spelling doaj-dd2a293d83dc4f7caae131cce75837062020-11-24T20:55:20ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942015-07-014C9510910.1016/j.gecco.2015.05.008Impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: A Mesoamerican perspectiveNina GallmetzerChristian H. SchulzeOil palm plantations expand rapidly in tropical regions, including the Neotropics. This study, quantifies the impact on the herpetofauna of the Pacific lowlands of Costa Rica. Amphibians and reptiles were sampled along transects in forest interior (FI), at forest margins (FM) and in oil palm plantations (OP). While no significant difference in species richness was found between FI and FM, OP were characterized by a strongly impoverished fauna. Total species richness of amphibians and reptiles was reduced to 45.3% and 49.8% compared to FI, respectively. Species assemblages in OP differed from forest habitats and were characterized by disturbance-tolerant species and a severe loss of endemic species. In amphibians, functional diversity declined dramatically towards OP indicating a decrease of their ecological function. The almost complete absence of leaf litter, understory vegetation and woody debris and the more open canopy may be responsible for the depauperate herpetofauna in OP. Enhancing understory vegetation could help making plantations a less hostile environment for some species. Still, those management measures might not be enough to promote forest specialists. Therefore, to maintain a diverse herpetofauna in tropical human-modified landscapes, the protection of any forested habitats such as secondary forests and strips of gallery forests is essential.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198941500061XCosta RicaHerpetofaunaOil palm plantationsFunctional diversityRange-restricted speciesForest specialists
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nina Gallmetzer
Christian H. Schulze
spellingShingle Nina Gallmetzer
Christian H. Schulze
Impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: A Mesoamerican perspective
Global Ecology and Conservation
Costa Rica
Herpetofauna
Oil palm plantations
Functional diversity
Range-restricted species
Forest specialists
author_facet Nina Gallmetzer
Christian H. Schulze
author_sort Nina Gallmetzer
title Impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: A Mesoamerican perspective
title_short Impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: A Mesoamerican perspective
title_full Impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: A Mesoamerican perspective
title_fullStr Impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: A Mesoamerican perspective
title_full_unstemmed Impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: A Mesoamerican perspective
title_sort impact of oil palm agriculture on understory amphibians and reptiles: a mesoamerican perspective
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Oil palm plantations expand rapidly in tropical regions, including the Neotropics. This study, quantifies the impact on the herpetofauna of the Pacific lowlands of Costa Rica. Amphibians and reptiles were sampled along transects in forest interior (FI), at forest margins (FM) and in oil palm plantations (OP). While no significant difference in species richness was found between FI and FM, OP were characterized by a strongly impoverished fauna. Total species richness of amphibians and reptiles was reduced to 45.3% and 49.8% compared to FI, respectively. Species assemblages in OP differed from forest habitats and were characterized by disturbance-tolerant species and a severe loss of endemic species. In amphibians, functional diversity declined dramatically towards OP indicating a decrease of their ecological function. The almost complete absence of leaf litter, understory vegetation and woody debris and the more open canopy may be responsible for the depauperate herpetofauna in OP. Enhancing understory vegetation could help making plantations a less hostile environment for some species. Still, those management measures might not be enough to promote forest specialists. Therefore, to maintain a diverse herpetofauna in tropical human-modified landscapes, the protection of any forested habitats such as secondary forests and strips of gallery forests is essential.
topic Costa Rica
Herpetofauna
Oil palm plantations
Functional diversity
Range-restricted species
Forest specialists
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198941500061X
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