4.7 Article

The relative influence of different landscape attributes on dung beetle communities in the Brazilian Atlantic forest

Journal

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
Volume 117, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2020.106534

Keywords

Anthropogenic landscape; Deforestation; Invertebrates; Land-use change; Scarabaeinae; Tropical forests

Funding

  1. Brazilian Council for Research and Technology (CNPq) [563216/2010-7]
  2. Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education (CAPES) [001, PDSE 88881.134879/2016-01]
  3. State University of Santa Cruz (PROPP) [00220.1100.1694]
  4. Rufford Foundation [22333-1]
  5. NERC [NE/P004512/1]
  6. CAPESCNPq [PELD-RAS 441659/2016-0]
  7. CAPES postdoctoral fellowship (Project PELD-COFA by MCT/CNPq/CAPES) [441278/2016-7]
  8. Funadesp [1700428]

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Land-use change is considered the greatest threat to biodiversity worldwide. As such, identifying the drivers that shape biological communities is crucial for enhancing conservation strategies in human-modified tropical landscapes. We used a hybrid patch-landscape design and a multi model inference approach to assess the relative impacts of forest loss, increased edge density and increased pasture cover on dung beetle functional groups in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest - a biodiversity hotspot. Our findings provide novel empirical evidence showing that edge density can be a major driver for dung beetles when compared to forest and pasture cover at the landscape scale. However, forest and pasture cover also influenced some dung beetle responses, supporting the idea that biological communities are negatively affected by habitat loss and changes in land cover. We found that dung beetle body size, protibia area and metatibia length were all larger in landscapes with increased edge density, reinforcing the need for further studies exploring which mechanisms could favour the presence of larger dung beetles in fragmented tropical landscapes. Taken together, these results suggest the need of conservation and management strategies focused on the protection of the remaining Atlantic Forest fragments, and the promotion of forest recovery and reduction in the pasture cover and edge density at the landscape-level.

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