محفوظ في:
التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
المؤلفون الرئيسيون: Farneda, Fábio Z., Rocha, Ricardo, López-Baucells, Adrià, Sampaio, Erica M., Palmeirim, Jorge M., Bobrowiec, Paulo E. D., Grelle, Carlos E. V., Meyer, Christoph F. J.
التنسيق: Recurso digital
اللغة:
منشور في: Zenodo 2018
الموضوعات:
الوصول للمادة أونلاين:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13490721
الوسوم: إضافة وسم
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author Farneda, Fábio Z.
Rocha, Ricardo
López-Baucells, Adrià
Sampaio, Erica M.
Palmeirim, Jorge M.
Bobrowiec, Paulo E. D.
Grelle, Carlos E. V.
Meyer, Christoph F. J.
author_facet Farneda, Fábio Z.
Rocha, Ricardo
López-Baucells, Adrià
Sampaio, Erica M.
Palmeirim, Jorge M.
Bobrowiec, Paulo E. D.
Grelle, Carlos E. V.
Meyer, Christoph F. J.
contents (Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Across the tropics, vast deforested areas are undergoing forest regeneration due to land abandonment. Although secondary forest is an expanding type of landscape matrix that has been shown to buffer some of the negative consequences of forest loss and fragmentation on taxonomic diversity, little is known in this regard about the functional dimension of biodiversity. We took advantage of an ecosystem-wide fragmentation experiment to investigate longer term changes in functional diversity of a mega-diverse Amazonian bat assemblage associated with regrowth development in the matrix. We found that matrix regeneration affected several facets of bat functional diversity in secondary forest over time, increasing functional a diversity, species- and community-level functional uniqueness, altering functional trait composition, and resulting in functional b-diversity changes via trait gains. However, approximately 30 years of matrix regeneration were insufficient for functional diversity to recover to the same levels as in continuous forest. Our results suggest that a combination of natural, humanassisted, and active restoration is likely to be the most successful strategy for restoring functional biodiversity of bats in human-modified tropical landscapes, a finding that most likely also applies to many other taxa.
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publisher Zenodo
record_format zenodo
spellingShingle The Road to Functional Recovery: Temporal Effects of Matrix Regeneration on Amazonian Bats
Farneda, Fábio Z.
Rocha, Ricardo
López-Baucells, Adrià
Sampaio, Erica M.
Palmeirim, Jorge M.
Bobrowiec, Paulo E. D.
Grelle, Carlos E. V.
Meyer, Christoph F. J.
Biodiversity
Mammalia
Chiroptera
Chordata
Animalia
bats
bat
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Across the tropics, vast deforested areas are undergoing forest regeneration due to land abandonment. Although secondary forest is an expanding type of landscape matrix that has been shown to buffer some of the negative consequences of forest loss and fragmentation on taxonomic diversity, little is known in this regard about the functional dimension of biodiversity. We took advantage of an ecosystem-wide fragmentation experiment to investigate longer term changes in functional diversity of a mega-diverse Amazonian bat assemblage associated with regrowth development in the matrix. We found that matrix regeneration affected several facets of bat functional diversity in secondary forest over time, increasing functional a diversity, species- and community-level functional uniqueness, altering functional trait composition, and resulting in functional b-diversity changes via trait gains. However, approximately 30 years of matrix regeneration were insufficient for functional diversity to recover to the same levels as in continuous forest. Our results suggest that a combination of natural, humanassisted, and active restoration is likely to be the most successful strategy for restoring functional biodiversity of bats in human-modified tropical landscapes, a finding that most likely also applies to many other taxa.
title The Road to Functional Recovery: Temporal Effects of Matrix Regeneration on Amazonian Bats
topic Biodiversity
Mammalia
Chiroptera
Chordata
Animalia
bats
bat
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13490721